How to Collaborate: Procedural Knowledge in the Cooperative Development of Science

Southern Journal of Philosophy 44 (S1):177-196 (2006)
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Abstract

This paper argues that collaboration in scientific and other fields requires a substantial amount of procedural knowledge about how to collaborate. It discusses how scientists collaborate, how they learn to collaborate, and why they collaborate. Knowledge how does not always reduce to knowledge that, and collaboration has many purposes besides the pursuit of power and resources. The relative scarcity of philosophical collaborations can be overcome by more naturalistic approaches to philosophy and by philosophers learning how to collaborate.

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Paul Thagard
University of Waterloo