Skip to main content

About Mark Couch

Professor Couch is interested in the areas of philosophy of science and philosophy of mind. His work is centered around the issue of how we should understand various kinds of explanations and the way they apply to human behavior. This involves examining whether and how explanations in the social sciences are distinct from explanations that are offered in other fields. He has published a number of articles including "Functional Properties and Convergence," Philosophy of Science, December 2005, vol. 72, "Multiple Realization in Comparative Perspective," Biology and Philosophy, September 2009, vol. 24, "Functional Explanation in Context," Philosophy of Science, April 2009, vol. 76, “Mechanisms and Constitutive Relevance,” Synthese, 2011, vol. 183, “Natural Kind,” New Catholic Encyclopedia Supplement 2012-13, “Some Concerns with Polger and Shapiro’s View,” Philosophical Psychology, 2018, vol. 31, and “Should Kant be Canceled?” Philosophy Now, 2022, vol. 148. He has also co-edited the book The Philosophy of Philip Kitcher by Oxford University Press in 2016.

Positions

Present Associate Professor, Seton Hall University Department of Philosophy
to


$
to
Enter a valid date range.

to
Enter a valid date range.

Articles (8)

Books (2)