Here's a collection of my published articles, smaller reviews as well as outreach pieces - contact me if you don't have access to any of them!
Journal Articles
Veigl, S. J. (2024). A common denominator? Epistemic systems bridge Epistemic Relativism and Epistemic Oppression. Hypatia, 1-19.
Suarez, J. and Veigl, S.J. (2024). Vindicating Lineage Eliminativism. Biological Theory, 1-15.
Veigl, S. J. (2024). More than just principles: revisiting epistemic systems. Synthese, 204(2), 57.
Veigl, S.J. (2024) Responsive genome or environmental determinism? - How epigenetics resituates organism, environment, and society. In On Epigenetics and Evolution (pp. 389-404). Academic Press.
Veigl, S. J. (2023). Towards a Politicized Anatomy of Fundamental Disagreement. International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 31(3), 450-466.
Veigl, S. J. (2023). What Counts as an Immune Response? On the Role of Abiotic Stress in Immunology. Biological Theory, 1-15.
Veigl, S. J., & Lamm, E. (2023). A Third Way to the Selected Effect/Causal Role Distinction in the Great Encode Debate. Theoretical Biology Forum: 116, 1/2, 53-74
Veigl, S. J. (2022). Adaptive immunity or evolutionary adaptation? Transgenerational immune systems at the crossroads. Biology & Philosophy, 37(5), 1-21.
Veigl, S. J., Suárez, J., & Stencel, A. (2022). Rethinking hereditary relations: the reconstitutor as the evolutionary unit of heredity. Synthese, 200(5), 1-42
Veigl, S. J. (2022). Scientific Pluralism in Practice: Responses to Anomaly in the Sciences. Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology, 14.
Veigl, S. J. (2022). Do heritable immune responses extend physiological individuality? History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences, 44(4), 67.
Lamm, E., & Veigl, S. J. (2022). Back to Chromatin: ENCODE and the Dynamic Epigenome. Biological Theory, 17(4), 235-242.
Veigl, S. J. (2021). Small RNA research and the scientific repertoire: a tale about biochemistry and genetics, crops and worms, development and disease. History and philosophy of the Life Sciences, 43(1), 1-25.
Veigl, S.J. (2020). Notes on a complicated relationship: scientific pluralism, epistemic relativism, and stances. Synthese, 1-19.
Lamm, E.; Harman, O.; Veigl, S.J. (2020): Watson and Crick Were Scooped by Friedrich Who? On Friedrich Miescher’s Dicovery of 1869, and the “code” before the code. Genetics, 215(2), 291-296.
Veigl, S.J.; Harman, O.; Lamm, E. (2020): Friedrich Miescher: The First and Forgotten Genome Scientist. Journal of the History of Biology. Journal of the History of Biology, 53(3), 451-484.
Veigl, S.J. (2017): Use/Disuse paradigms are ubiquitous concepts in characterizing the process of inheritance. RNA Biolology, 14(12):1700-1704
Book Reviews & Commentaries
Veigl, S.J. (2021). Teaching Biologists the Philosophy of Their Time. Acta Biotheoretica
Veigl, S.J. (2019): Seeing "Lamarckian" more positively: The use/disuse paradigm can help scientific progress. Bioessays 41(6), 1900054; video abstract: https://youtu.be/77_er7BWjgg
Veigl, S.J. (2019): A Use/Disuse Paradigm for CRISPR-Cas Systems. Biology and Philosophy 34(1), 13.
Outreach - German only
Friedrich Miescher and the Discovery of DNA - Verhöhnt, verraten und vergessen - HEUREKA 3/20 - FALTER.at
Feminist Philosophy of Science - Wissenschaft ist Politik - HEUREKA 5/21 - FALTER.at
HIV Patient Movements and Clinical Trials - HEUREKA 2/22 by Falter Verlagsgesellschaft m.b.H. - Issuu
Pandemic Prevention and Citizen Science - Die nächste Pandemie - HEUREKA 7/21 - FALTER.at
Ignorance - Was bewirkt Ignoranz? - HEUREKA 3/23 - FALTER.at
Epigenetics & Environmental Determinism - Epigenetik für Taschenspielertricks - FALTER.at