The Monist

Volume 95, Issue 2, April 2012

Experimental Philosophy

Amie L. Thomasson
Pages 175-199

Experimental Philosophy and the Methods of Ontology

Cited by

  • David Ludwig. A Pluralist Theory of the Mind 2015: 33. [CrossRef]
  • Elzė Sigutė Mikalonytė. Review of Philosophy and Psychology. Intuitions in the Ontology of Musical Works 2022. [CrossRef]
  • Annelies Monseré. Theoria. The Charge from Psychology and Art's Definition 2016. [CrossRef]
  • Miguel Garcia-Godinez. Synthese. A deflationary approach to legal ontology 2024. [CrossRef]
  • Kazuki Iijima, Koji Ota. Frontiers in Psychology. How (not) to draw philosophical implications from the cognitive nature of concepts: the case of intentionality 2014. [CrossRef]
  • The Cambridge Companion to Philosophical Methodology 2017. [CrossRef]
  • Amie L. Thomasson. Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement. Changing Metaphysics: What Difference does it Make? 2018. [CrossRef]
  • E. Díaz‐León. Journal of Social Philosophy. Substantive metaphysical debates about gender and race: Verbal disputes and metaphysical deflationism 2022. [CrossRef]
  • Brian D. Earp, Jonathan Lewis, Vilius Dranseika, Ivar R. Hannikainen. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics. Experimental philosophical bioethics and normative inference 2021. [CrossRef]
  • Amie L. Thomasson. Philosophical Issues. Metaphysics and Conceptual Negotiation 2017. [CrossRef]
  • Miguel Garcia-Godinez. Thomasson on Ontology 2023: 183. [CrossRef]
There may be additional citations on Google Scholar.