To sum up, three external features of philosophy of science in Taiwan are apparent.
(1) The role of the Anglo-Saxon tradition has been dominant. Most studies introduce,
interpret, revise, and criticize one or another of the important philosophical theories
of science. (2) Concerns about the public affairs are apparent enough to constitute a
traditional “culture.” (3) Philosophers of science are few in number, between ten
(including general methodology and epistemology, history and philosophy of science,
and philosophy of physics, biology, and economics) and twenty (including philosophy
of mathematics, philosophy of psychology and cognitive science, and metaphysics of
mind and world) practitioners; there is no professional journal for philosophy of
science in Taiwan. (32)