Susan Oyama
Susan Oyama is a psychologist and philosopher of science, currently professor emerita at the John Jay College and CUNY Graduate Center in New York.[1]
Oyama's work interrogates the Nature versus nurture debates, and problematizes the conceptual foundations (e.g., assumptions, binaries, and classifications) on which these debates depend. Her notion of a "developmental system" allows us to reevaluate and reintegrate standard dichotomies such as development and evolution, body and mind, object and subject, and stasis and change. Oyama's Developmental systems theory has had a significant impact in philosophy of biology, cognitive science, and psychology.
Publications
- The Ontogeny of Information (2000)
- Cycles of Contingency (2001)
- Evolution's Eye: A Systems View of the Biology-Culture Divide (2000)
- The Ontogeny of Information: Developmental Systems and Evolution is regarded as a foundational text in developmental systems theory.[2]
See also
- Epigenetics
- Evo-devo
- Modern evolutionary synthesis
References
- ↑ "John Jay College". Academia.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-25.
- ↑ "Susan Oyama Bibliography". The American School in Japan. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
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