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  1. The species problem: A reply to Hull.Michael Ruse - 1971 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 22 (4):369-371.
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  • Mathematics and Reality. [REVIEW]Simon J. Prokhovnik - 1977 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 28 (2):189 - 194.
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  • A logical empiricist looks at biology. [REVIEW]David L. Hull - 1977 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 28 (2):181-189.
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  • Darwin among the Philosophers: Hull and Ruse on Darwin, Herschel, and Whewell.Phillip Honenberger - 2018 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 8 (2):278-309.
    In a series of articles and books published in the 1970s, David Hull (1935–2010) and Michael Ruse (1940–) proposed interpretations of the relation between nineteenth-century British philosophy of science, on the one hand, and the views and methods of Charles Darwin, on the other, that were incompatible or at least in strong interpretive tension with one another. According to Hull, John Herschel’s and William Whewell’s philosophies of science were logically incompatible with Darwin’s revolutionary theory. According to Ruse, however, Darwin discovered (...)
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  • An integrated biological approach to the species problem.Erol F. Giray - 1976 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 27 (4):317-328.
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  • Natural kinds and freaks of nature.Evan Fales - 1982 - Philosophy of Science 49 (1):67-90.
    Essentialism--understood as the doctrine that there are natural kinds--can be sustained with respect to the most fundamental physical entities of the world, as I elsewhere argue. In this paper I take up the question of the existence of natural kinds among complex structures built out of these elementary ones. I consider a number of objections to essentialism, in particular Locke's puzzle about the existence of borderline cases. A number of recent attempts to justify biological taxonomy are critically examined. I conclude (...)
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