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This book offers a unique perspective on one of the deepest
questions about the world we live in: is reality multi-leveled, or
can everything be reduced to some fundamental 'flat' level? This
deep philosophical issue has widespread implications in philosophy,
since it is fundamental to how we understand the world and the
basic entities in it. Both the notion of 'levels' within science
and their ontological implications are issues that are
underexplored in the philosophical literature. The volume
reconsiders the view that reality contains many levels and opens
new ways to understand the ontological status of the special
sciences. The book focuses on major open questions that arise at
the foundations of cognitive science, cognitive psychology, brain
science and other special sciences, in particular with respect to
the physical foundations of these sciences. For example: Is the
mental computational? Do brains compute? How can the special
sciences be autonomous from physics, grounded in, or based on,
physics and at the same time irreducible to physics? The book is an
important read for scientists and philosophers alike. It is of
interest to philosophers of science, philosophers of mind and
biology interested in the notion of levels, but also to
psychologists, cognitive scientists and neuroscientists
investigating such issues as the precise relation of the mental to
the underlying neural structures and the appropriate approach to
study it.
This book offers a unique perspective on one of the deepest
questions about the world we live in: is reality multi-leveled, or
can everything be reduced to some fundamental ‘flat’
level?  This deep philosophical issue has widespread
implications in philosophy, since it is fundamental to how we
understand the world and the basic entities in it. Both the notion
of ‘levels’ within science and their ontological implications
are issues that are underexplored in the philosophical literature.
The volume reconsiders the view that reality contains many levels
and opens new ways to understand the ontological status of the
special sciences. The book focuses on major open questions that
arise at the foundations of cognitive science, cognitive
psychology, brain science and other special sciences, in particular
with respect to the physical foundations of these sciences. For
example: Is the mental computational? Do brains compute? How can
the special sciences be autonomous from physics, grounded in, or
based on, physics and at the same time irreducible to
physics?  The book is an important read for
scientists and philosophers alike. It is of interest to
philosophers of science, philosophers of mind and biology
interested in the notion of levels, but also to psychologists,
cognitive scientists and neuroscientists investigating such issues
as the precise relation of the mental to the underlying neural
structures and the appropriate approach to study it.
In recent years what has come to be called the 'New Mechanism' has
emerged as a framework for thinking about the philosophical
assumptions underlying many areas of science, especially in
sciences such as biology, neuroscience, and psychology. This book
offers a fresh look at the role of mechanisms, by situating novel
analyses of central philosophical issues related to mechanisms
within a rich historical perspective of the concept of mechanism as
well as detailed case studies of biological mechanisms (such as
apoptosis). It develops a new position, Methodological Mechanism,
according to which mechanisms are to be viewed as causal pathways
that are theoretically described and are underpinned by networks of
difference-making relations. In contrast to metaphysically inflated
accounts, this study characterises mechanism as a concept-in-use in
science that is deflationary and metaphysically neutral, but still
methodologically useful and central to scientific practice.
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