Dr. Christopher Stephens

Christopher Stephens’ (Philosophy) primary STS related interests are in philosophy of biology, especially conceptual and methodological issues concerning evolutionary biology.

Selected Publications

  • A Bayesian Approach to Absent Evidence Reasoning”, Informal Logic, vol. 31, no. 1, (2011) p. 56-65
  • Forces and Causes in Evolutionary Theory”, Philosophy of Science, December, (2010) p. 716-727
  • Selection, Drift and the ‘Forces’ of Evolution”, Philosophy of Science, October, (2004) p. 550-570
  • “When is it Selectively Advantageous to Have True Beliefs? Sandwiching the Better-Safe-than-Sorry Argument”, Philosophical Studies, vol. 105, number 2, (2001) p. 161-189

 

Research Interests

My primary areas of specialization are philosophy of biology, philosophy of science and epistemology. Much of my research has focused on the conceptual foundations of evolutionary theory, including issues about how to understand causes and the nature of evidence in evolutionary biology. I have worked on reciprocal altruism, phylogenetic inference, and on models of the evolution of rationality. In philosophy of science and epistemology, I am primarily interested in using tools from confirmation theory to think about problems in traditional epistemology, such as external world skepticism. I am also interested in issues surrounding the nature and justification of epistemic rationality, including the issue of whether and why it is prudent to be epistemically rational.

Recent and Upcoming Presentations

  • “Modus Darwin Redux” at CSHPS, June 2013
  • “Is it prudent to be an evidentialist?” Soberfest, May 25, 2013.


Christopher Stephens, Department of Philosophy

Associate Professor (B.A. University of Kansas, Ph.D. University of Wisconsin-Madison)
Office: Buchanan E356
Telephone: (604) 822-6393
Email: chris.stephens@ubc.ca
Website: http://faculty.arts.ubc.ca/cstephens/Chris_Stephens_Website/Home_Page.html

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