Stuff I've been reading (March 2025)

By Os Keyes

I know, I’m missing February; it was a long month I’ll probably write up. In the interim, for March:

Books and dissertations

Papers and Chapters

  • Beaver, Donald deB. “Does collaborative research have greater epistemic authority?.” Scientometrics 60 (2004): 399-408.
  • Brown, Warren C., and Rory Cox. “Violence and order past and present.” Global intellectual history (2023): 1-16.
  • Funer, Florian. “The deception of certainty: how non-interpretable machine learning outcomes challenge the epistemic authority of physicians. A deliberative-relational approach.” Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 25.2 (2022): 167-178.
  • Oles, Norah, Rodrigo Fontenele, and Margarita Abi Zeid Daou. “Transgender History, Part II: A Brief History of Medical and Surgical Gender‐Affirming Care.” Behavioral Sciences & the Law (2025).
  • Pierson, Robert. “The epistemic authority of expertise.” PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association. Vol. 1994. No. 1. Cambridge University Press, 1994.
  • Walzer, Michael. “The crime of aggressive war.” Wash. U. Global Stud. L. Rev. 6 (2007): 635.