Book
My book “Simulating Science: Computer Simulations as Scientific Instruments” has been published as part of the Synthese Library Book Series, by Springer.
Papers
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Computer Simulations in Science (with Eric Winsberg). Forthcoming.
On The Epistemology of Computational Methods in Science: A Shift Towards an Epistemology of Instruments (Forthcoming in the 2nd Edition of the Routledge Companion to Religion & Science. Ed. Spezio, Haag, and Peterson)
On Challenges to Computational Reliabilism as Justification for Machine Learning in Science (Forthcoming in Pozzi and Duran’s (eds.) book “Philosophy of Science for Machine Learning: Core Issues and New Perspectives”, Synthese Library Series, Springer)
On What Is Epistemic Loneliness (In Synthese)
On The Incommensurability of Caring: ML, Clinical Decision-Making, and Human Reasoning in Healthcare ( With Nicolae Morar in the American Journal of Bioethics).
On AI as an Epistemic Technology (in Science and Engineering Ethics)
On What Kind of Trust Does AI deserve, if Any? ( in AI and Ethics)
On ChatGPT as a genuine challenge to the inherently interpersonal aspects of healthcare (with N. Morar in The American Journal of Bioethics)
On Epistemic Injustice and Data Science Technologies (with John Symons, in Synthese)
On replacing humans for clinical care and trust in medical AI. (in Bioethics)
On understanding computer simulations as scientific instruments. (in Foundations of Science)
On health, autonomy and AI diagnosis from social media content/data analysis (with Nicolae Morar in The American Journal of Bioethics).
On AI, machine learning, big data and democratic processes. (in Big Data and Democracy ed. Macnish and Galliott)
On Epistemic Entitlements and the Practice of Computer Simulation for scientific inquiry (with John Symons in Minds and Machines).
On the epistemic implications of big data in science (with John Symons in Big Data and Society)