Arnon Levy The Van Leer Institute
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  • Postdoc, The Van Leer Institute
  • PhD, Harvard University, 2010.

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About me
I am a Polonsky postdoctoral fellow at the Van Leer Institute, in Jerusalem. My primary research focuses on modeling and scientific explanation, with an emphasis on biology. Starting in 2014, I will be a lecturer (equivalent to assistant professor) in the philosophy department at Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
My works
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  1. Arnon Levy (forthcoming). What Was Hodgkin and Huxley's Achievement? British Journal for the Philosophy of Science.
    The Hodgkin–Huxley (HH) model of the action potential is a theoretical pillar of modern neurobiology. In a number of recent publications, Carl Craver ([2006], [2007], [2008]) has argued that the model is explanatorily deficient because it does not reveal enough about underlying molecular mechanisms. I offer an alternative picture of the HH model, according to which it deliberately abstracts from molecular specifics. By doing so, the model explains whole-cell behaviour as the product of a mass of underlying low-level events. The (...)
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  2. Arnon Levy & William Bechtel (forthcoming). Abstraction and the Organization of Mechansims. Philosophy of Science.
  3. Arnon Levy (2013). Anchoring Fictional Models. Biology and Philosophy 28 (4):693-701.
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  4. Arnon Levy (2013). Three Kinds of New Mechanism. Biology and Philosophy 28 (1):99-114.
    I distinguish three theses associated with the new mechanistic philosophy – concerning causation, explanation and scientific methodology. Advocates of each thesis are identified and relationships among them are outlined. I then look at some recent work on natural selection and mechanisms. There, attention to different kinds of New Mechanism significantly affects of what is at stake.
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  5. Arnon Levy (2012). Models, Fictions, and Realism: Two Packages. Philosophy of Science 79 (5):738-748.
    Some philosophers of science – the present author included – appeal to fiction as an interpretation of the practice of modeling. This raises the specter of an incompatibility with realism, since fiction-making is essentially non-truth-regulated. I argue that the prima facie conflict can be resolved in two ways, each involving a distinct notion of fiction and a corresponding formulation of realism. The main goal of the paper is to describe these two packages. Toward the end I comment on how to (...)
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  6. Arnon Levy (2011). Game Theory, Indirect Modeling, and the Origin of Morality. Journal of Philosophy 108 (4):171-187.
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  7. Arnon Levy (2011). Information in Biology: A Fictionalist Account. Noûs 45 (4):640-657.
  8. Arnon Levy (2011). Makes a Difference. Biology and Philosophy 26 (3):459-467.
    Michael Strevens has produced an ambitious and comprehensive new account of scientific explanation. This review discusses its main themes, focusing on regularity explanation and a number of methodological concerns.
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  9. Arnon Levy (2009). Explaining What? Review of Explaining the Brain: Mechanisms and the Mosaic Unity of Neuroscience by Carl F. Craver. Biology and Philosophy 24 (1).
    Carl Craver’s recent book offers an account of the explanatory and theoretical structure of neuroscience. It depicts it as centered around the idea of achieving mechanistic understanding, i.e., obtaining knowledge of how a set of underlying components interacts to produce a given function of the brain. Its core account of mechanistic explanation and relevance is causal-manipulationist in spirit, and offers substantial insight into casual explanation in brain science and the associated notion of levels of explanation. However, the focus on mechanistic (...)
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  10. Arnon Levy & Eva Jablonka (2004). Marcello Barbieri (2003). The Organic Codes: An Introduction to Semantic Biology. Acta Biotheoretica 52 (1).
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