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39Style and SupervenienceThe Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 1 35-40. 1998.Cope’s Computers and Musical Style describes a computer program that allegedly can represent and replicate musical styles solely on the basis of compositions that have been entered into it. If this claim is correct, then it must be that an oeuvre’s stylistic characteristics locally supervene on its textual features, which roughly means that its stylistic properties are entirely determined by its textual properties. In my paper I argue that stylistic properties do not locally supervene on textual…Read more
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74Pandemics and flexible lockdowns: In praise of agent-based modelingEuropean Journal for Philosophy of Science 13 (3): 1-27. 2023.Philosophers have recently questioned the methodological status of agent-based modeling. Meanwhile, this methodology has been central to various studies of the COVID-19 pandemic. Few agent-based COVID-19 models are accessible to philosophers for inspection or experimentation. We make available a package for modeling the COVID-19 pandemic and similar pandemics and give an impression of what can be achieved with it. In particular, it is shown that by coupling an agent-based model to a standard opt…Read more
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58Williamson on conditionals and testimonyPhilosophical Studies 180 (1): 121-131. 2022.In _Suppose and Tell_, Williamson makes a new case for the material conditional account. He tries to explain away apparently countervailing data by arguing that these have been misinterpreted because researchers have overlooked the role of heuristics in the processing of conditionals. Cases involving the receipt of apparently conflicting conditionals play an important dialectical role in Williamson’s book: they are supposed to provide evidence for the material conditional account as well as for …Read more
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93Mis- and disinformation in a bounded confidence modelArtificial Intelligence 291 (C): 103415. 2021.
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97Basic Beliefs, Coherence, and Bootstrap ConfirmationIn René Woudenberg, Sabine Roeser & Ron Rood (eds.), Basic Belief and Basic Knowledge: Papers in Epistemology, De Gruyter. pp. 57-76. 2005.
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61Is the new paradigm a new paradigm? Commentary on Knauff and Gazzo Castañeda (2023)Thinking and Reasoning 29 (3): 383-388. 2023.Many cognitive psychologists have come to regard graded belief as fundamental to our understanding of how humans reason and many have also come to think of probability theory as providing at least part of the norms of correct reasoning. David Over has characterized this development as the emergence of a new paradigm in the Kuhnian sense. The target article argues that the choice of this term was unwarranted and also that it has done more harm than good. This commentary argues that there is nothi…Read more
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145Topics of Thought: The Logic of Knowledge, Belief, Imagination, by Francesco BertoMind 134 (534): 524-532. 2023.Topics of Thought: The Logic of Knowledge, Belief, Imagination, by BertoFrancesco. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2022. Pp. xi + 229.
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76The art of abductionMassachusetts Institute of Technology Press. 2022.A defense of the rationality of adductive inference from the criticisms of Bayesian theorists.
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203Explaining the Success of InductionBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 74 (2): 381-404. 2023.It is undeniable that inductive reasoning has brought us much good. At least since Hume, however, philosophers have wondered how to justify our reliance on induction. In important recent work, Schurz points out that philosophers have been wrongly assuming that justifying induction is tantamount to showing induction to be reliable. According to him, to justify our reliance on induction, it is enough to show that induction is optimal. His optimality approach consists of two steps: an analytic argu…Read more
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27Relativism and Confirmation TheoryIn Steven D. Hales (ed.), A Companion to Relativism, Wiley-blackwell. 2010.This chapter contains sections titled: Abstract Introduction First Attempts The Bayesian Paradigm What Good Is There in a Subjectivist Confirmation Theory? Concluding Remarks References.
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314Formal Epistemology and the New Paradigm Psychology of ReasoningReview of Philosophy and Psychology 5 (2): 199-221. 2014.This position paper advocates combining formal epistemology and the new paradigm psychology of reasoning in the studies of conditionals and reasoning with uncertainty. The new paradigm psychology of reasoning is characterized by the use of probability theory as a rationality framework instead of classical logic, used by more traditional approaches to the psychology of reasoning. This paper presents a new interdisciplinary research program which involves both formal and experimental work. To illu…Read more
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560The Rationality of VaguenessIn Richard Dietz (ed.), Vagueness and Rationality in Language Use and Cognition, Springer Verlag. pp. 115-134. 2019.Vagueness is often regarded as a kind of defect of our language or of our thinking. This paper portrays vagueness as the natural outcome of applying a number of rationality principles to the cognitive domain. Given our physical and cognitive makeup, and given the way the world is, applying those principles to conceptualization predicts not only the concepts that are actually in use, but also their vagueness, and how and when their vagueness manifests itself.
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72Moral BookkeepingErgo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 10 (n/a). 2023.There is widespread agreement among philosophers about the Mens Rea Asymmetry (MRA), according to which praise requires intent, whereas blame does not. However, there is evidence showing that MRA is descriptively inadequate. We hypothesize that the violations of MRA found in the experimental literature are due to what we call “moral compositionality,” by which we mean that people evaluate the component parts of a moral problem separately and then reach an overall verdict by aggregating the verdi…Read more
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80Conceptual spaces and the strength of similarity-based argumentsCognition 218 (C): 104951. 2022.
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87Scoring, truthlikeness, and valueSynthese 199 (3-4): 8281-8298. 2021.There is an ongoing debate about which rule we ought to use for scoring probability estimates. Much of this debate has been premised on scoring-rule monism, according to which there is exactly one best scoring rule. In previous work, I have argued against this position. The argument given there was based on purely a priori considerations, notably the intuition that scoring rules should be sensitive to truthlikeness relations if, and only if, such relations are present among whichever hypotheses …Read more
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114The Stability of Belief: How Rational Belief Coheres with ProbabilityPhilosophical Review 128 (3): 371-375. 2019.
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51Experimental Approaches to the Study of ConditionalsIn Wesley Buckwalter & Justin Sytsma (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Experimental Philosophy, Blackwell. 2016.Conditionals have been studied by philosophers for over two thousand years. This should not be surprising, given how central conditionals are to human reasoning and decision making. This chapter argues that making progress in answering the questions about conditionals which have occupied so many philosophers, past and present, may require the use of methods that go beyond those traditionally used in analytic philosophy. The reasons some might have for believing that experimental methods have no …Read more
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169Network effects in a bounded confidence modelStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 94 (C): 56-71. 2022.The bounded confidence model has become a popular tool for studying communities of epistemically interacting agents. The model makes the idealizing assumption that all agents always have access to all other agents’ belief states. We draw on resources from network epistemology to do away with this assumption. In the model to be proposed, we impose an explicit communication network on a community, due to which each agent has access to the beliefs of only a selection of other agents. A much-discuss…Read more
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55Optimizing group learning: An evolutionary computing approachArtificial Intelligence 275 (C): 235-251. 2019.
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122The Lottery Paradox and the Pragmatics of BeliefDialectica 66 (3): 351-373. 2012.The thesis that high probability suffices for rational belief, while initially plausible, is known to face the Lottery Paradox. The present paper proposes an amended version of that thesis which escapes the Lottery Paradox. The amendment is argued to be plausible on independent grounds.
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1Conditionals and inferential connections: A hypothetical inferential theoryCognitive Psychology 101 50-81. 2018.
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188Probability of inconsistencies in theory revisionEuropean Physical Journal B 85 (1). 2012.We present a model for studying communities of epistemically interacting agents who update their belief states by averaging the belief states of other agents in the community. The agents in our model have a rich belief state, involving multiple independent issues which are interrelated in such a way that they form a theory of the world. Our main goal is to calculate the probability for an agent to end up in an inconsistent belief state due to updating. To that end, an analytical expression is gi…Read more
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164Constraints on Colour Category FormationInternational Studies in the Philosophy of Science 26 (2): 171-196. 2012.This article addresses two questions related to colour categorization, to wit, the question what a colour category is, and the question how we identify colour categories. We reject both the relativist and universalist answers to these questions. Instead, we suggest that colour categories can be identified with the help of the criterion of psychological saliency, which can be operationalized by means of consistency and consensus measures. We further argue that colour categories can be defined as …Read more
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178The Pragmatics of BeliefJournal of Pragmatics 42 (1): 35-47. 2010.This paper argues that pragmatic considerations similar to the ones that Grice has shown pertain to assertability pertain to acceptability. It further shows how this should affect some widely held epistemic principles. The idea of a pragmatics of belief is defended against some seemingly obvious objections.
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2959What are natural concepts? A design perspectiveMind and Language 3 313-334. 2019.Conceptual spaces have become an increasingly popular modeling tool in cognitive psychology. The core idea of the conceptual spaces approach is that concepts can be represented as regions in similarity spaces. While it is generally acknowledged that not every region in such a space represents a natural concept, it is still an open question what distinguishes those regions that represent natural concepts from those that do not. The central claim of this paper is that natural concepts are represen…Read more
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Clustering ColorsCognitive Systems Research 45 70-81. 2017.Regier, Kay, and Khetarpal report the results of computer simulations that cluster color stimuli on the basis of their coordinates in CIELAB space, one of two commonly used perceptual color spaces. Regier and coauthors find partitions of those stimuli that are strikingly similar to the way actual color lexicons partition color space. They do not argue for the custom-made clustering method used in their simulations, nor for the assumption of CIELAB space. The present paper aims to answer the ques…Read more
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470Returning the Gift of LifeArs Disputandi 4. 2004.The gift of life argument, the claim that suicide is immoral because our lives are not ours to dispose of as we are their guardians or stewards, is a persistent theme in debates about the morality of suicide, assisted-suicide, and euthanasia. I argue that this argument suffers from a fatal internal incoherence. The gift can either be interpreted literally or analogically. If it is interpreted literally there are serious problems in understanding who receives the gift. If it is understood analogi…Read more
Areas of Specialization
| Other Academic Areas |
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| Metaphysics and Epistemology |
| Epistemology, Miscellaneous |