•  50
    Radim Belohlavek and George J. Klir, Concepts and Fuzzy Logic
    Studia Logica 102 (5): 1075-1077. 2014.
  •  368
    Testing Inference To The Best Explanation
    Synthese 130 (3): 355-377. 2002.
    Inference to the Best Explanation has become the subject of a livelydebate in the philosophy of science. Scientific realists maintain, while scientificantirealists deny, that it is a compelling rule of inference. It seems that anyattempt to settle this debate empirically must beg the question against theantirealist. The present paper argues that this impression is misleading. A methodis described that, by combining Glymour's theory of bootstrapping and Hacking'sarguments from microscopy, allows …Read more
  •  54
    Lotteries, Knowledge, and Rational Belief: Essays on the Lottery Paradox (edited book)
    Cambridge University Press. 2020.
    We talk and think about our beliefs both in a categorical and in a graded way. How do the two kinds of belief hang together? The most straightforward answer is that we believe something categorically if we believe it to a high enough degree. But this seemingly obvious, near-platitudinous claim is known to give rise to a paradox commonly known as the 'lottery paradox' – at least when it is coupled with some further seeming near-platitudes about belief. How to resolve that paradox has been a matte…Read more
  •  44
    1. The Epistemology of Conditionals
    Oxford Studies in Epistemology 4 1. 2013.
  •  435
    Inference to the best explanation made coherent
    Philosophy of Science 66 (Supplement). 1999.
    Van Fraassen (1989) argues that Inference to the Best Explanation is incoherent in the sense that adopting it as a rule for belief change will make one susceptible to a dynamic Dutch book. The present paper argues against this. A strategy is described that allows us to infer to the best explanation free of charge.
  •  59
    Reasoning about evidence
    Journal of Applied Logic 12 (3): 263-278. 2014.
  •  389
    Putnam’s Model-Theoretic Argument Reconstructed
    Journal of Philosophy 96 (9): 479-490. 1999.
    Putnam's model theoretic argument against metaphysical realism can be reconstructed as valid, with premises acceptable to the realist. There is no illegitimate assumption that the causal theory of reference is false.
  •  246
    Nelkin on the lottery paradox
    Philosophical Review 112 (3): 395-404. 2003.
    As part of an exceptionally lucid analysis of the Lottery Paradox, Dana Nelkin castigates the solutions to that paradox put forward by Laurence Bonjour and Sharon Ryan. According to her, these are “so finely tailored to lottery-like cases that they are limited in their ability to explain [what seem the intuitively right responses to such cases]”. She then offers a solution to the Lottery Paradox that allegedly has the virtue of being independently motivated by our intuitions regarding certain no…Read more
  •  200
    Inference to the Best Explanation, Dutch Books, and Inaccuracy Minimisation
    Philosophical Quarterly 63 (252): 428-444. 2013.
    Bayesians have traditionally taken a dim view of the Inference to the Best Explanation, arguing that, if IBE is at variance with Bayes ' rule, then it runs afoul of the dynamic Dutch book argument. More recently, Bayes ' rule has been claimed to be superior on grounds of conduciveness to our epistemic goal. The present paper aims to show that neither of these arguments succeeds in undermining IBE.
  •  135
    Over recent decades, computer simulations have become a common tool among practitioners of the social sciences. They have been utilized to study such diverse phenomena as the integration and segregation of different racial groups, the emergence and evolution of friendship networks, the spread of gossip, fluctuations of housing prices in an area, the transmission of social norms, and many more. Philosophers of science and others interested in the methodological status of these studies have identi…Read more
  •  203
    Quantum probabilities and the conjunction principle
    with Jos Uffink
    Synthese 184 (1): 109-114. 2012.
    A recent argument by Hawthorne and Lasonen-Aarnio purports to show that we can uphold the principle that competently forming conjunctions is a knowledge-preserving operation only at the cost of a rampant skepticism about the future. A key premise of their argument is that, in light of quantum-mechanical considerations, future contingents never quite have chance 1 of being true. We argue, by drawing attention to the order of magnitude of the relevant quantum probabilities, that the skeptical thre…Read more
  •  198
    Probabilist antirealism
    Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 91 (1): 38-63. 2010.
    Until now, antirealists have offered sketches of a theory of truth, at best. In this paper, we present a probabilist account of antirealist truth in some formal detail, and we assess its ability to deal with the problems that are standardly taken to beset antirealism.
  •  144
    Lewis on fallible knowledge
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 83 (4). 2005.
    Lewis has offered a contextualist epistemology that he claims is non-fallibilist. The present note aims to show that, while there seems to be a simple argument for Lewis's claim, the argument is fallacious, and Lewis's epistemology is fallibilist after all.
  •  104
    A role for normativism
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 34 (5): 252-253. 2011.
    Elqayam & Evans (E&E) argue against prescriptive normativism and in favor of descriptivism. I challenge the assumption, implicit in their article, that there is a choice to be made between the two approaches. While descriptivism may be the right approach for some questions, others call for a normativist approach. To illustrate the point, I briefly discuss two questions of the latter sort.
  •  247
    Assertion, Moore, and Bayes
    Philosophical Studies 144 (3): 361-375. 2009.
    It is widely believed that the so-called knowledge account of assertion best explains why sentences such as “It’s raining in Paris but I don’t believe it” and “It’s raining in Paris but I don’t know it” appear odd to us. I argue that the rival rational credibility account of assertion explains that fact just as well. I do so by providing a broadly Bayesian analysis of the said type of sentences which shows that such sentences cannot express rationally held beliefs. As an interesting aside, it wi…Read more
  •  193
    Further results on the intransitivity of evidential support
    Review of Symbolic Logic 4 (4): 487-497. 2011.
    It is known that evidential support, on the Bayesian definition of this notion, is intransitive. According to some, however, the Bayesian definition is too weak to be materially adequate. This paper investigates whether evidential support is transitive on some plausible probabilistic strengthening of that definition. It is shown that the answer is negative. In fact, it will appear that even under conditions under which the Bayesian notion of evidential support is transitive, the most plausible c…Read more
  •  178
    What Is Graded Membership?
    Noûs 48 (4): 653-682. 2012.
    It has seemed natural to model phenomena related to vagueness in terms of graded membership. However, so far no satisfactory answer has been given to the question of what graded membership is nor has any attempt been made to describe in detail a procedure for determining degrees of membership. We seek to remedy these lacunae by building on recent work on typicality and graded membership in cognitive science and combining some of the results obtained there with a version of the conceptual spaces …Read more
  •  82
    Extending the Hegselmann–Krause Model I
    Logic Journal of the IGPL 18 (2): 323-335. 2009.
    Hegselmann and Krause have developed a simple yet powerful computational model for studying the opinion dynamics in societies of epistemically interacting truth-seeking agents. We present various extensions of this model and show their relevance to the investigation of socio-epistemic questions, with an emphasis on normative questions.
  •  142
    Deflating the correspondence intuition
    Dialectica 59 (3). 2005.
    A common objection against deflationist theories of truth is that they cannot do justice to the correspondence intuition, i.e. the intuition that there is an explanatory relationship between, for instance, the truth of ‘Snow is white’ and snow's being white. We scrutinize two attempts to meet this objection and argue that both fail. We then propose a new response to the objection which, first, sheds doubt on the correctness of the correspondence intuition and, second, seeks to explain how we may…Read more
  •  280
    A paradox for empiricism (?)
    Philosophy of Science 63 (3): 297. 1996.
    According to van Fraassen, constructive empiricism yields a better account of science than does scientific realism. One particularly important advantage van Fraassen claims his position to have over scientific realism is that the former can make sense of science without invoking (what he calls) pre-Kantian metaphysics. In the present paper the consistency of van Fraassen's position is put in doubt. Specifically, it will be argued that van Fraassen faces the paradox that he cannot do with nor wit…Read more
  •  127
    Fitch’s Paradox and Probabilistic Antirealism
    Studia Logica 86 (2): 149-182. 2007.
    Fitch’s paradox shows, from fairly innocent-looking assumptions, that if there are any unknown truths, then there are unknowable truths. This is generally thought to deliver a blow to antirealist positions that imply that all truths are knowable. The present paper argues that a probabilistic version of antirealism escapes Fitch’s result while still offering all that antirealists should care for.
  •  154
    Can the skepticism debate be resolved?
    Synthese 168 (1): 23-52. 2009.
    External world skeptics are typically opposed to admitting as evidence anything that goes beyond the purely phenomenal, and equally typically, they disown the use of rules of inference that might enable one to move from premises about the phenomenal alone to a conclusion about the external world. This seems to bar any a posteriori resolution of the skepticism debate. This paper argues that the situation is not quite so hopeless, and that an a posteriori resolution of the debate becomes possible …Read more
  •  14
    A three-step solution to the two-envelope paradox
    Logique Et Analyse 50 (200): 359-365. 2007.
    The two-envelope paradox is a paradox in game theory. This paper offers a solution to it in three steps. The first step is to recognize that the paradox is dependent on how one represents the game-theoretic situation that gives rise to it. In the second step, we note that the representation used in the paradox violates a familiar symmetry requirement. And in the third, we derive the solution from the symmetry requirement plus the given that we are dealing with a zero-sum game. © 2012 Elsevier B.…Read more