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141Do we need second-order probabilities?Dialectica 62 (4): 525-533. 2008.Although it has often been claimed that all the information contained in second-order probabilities can be contained in first-order probabilities, no practical recipe for the elimination of second-order probabilities without loss of information seems to have been presented. Here, such an elimination method is introduced for repeatable events. However, its application comes at the price of losses in cognitive realism. In spite of their technical eliminability, second-order probabilities are usefu…Read more
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89Coping with the Unpredictable Effects of Future TechnologiesPhilosophy and Technology 24 (2): 137-149. 2011.Available methods such as technology assessment and risk analysis have failed to predict the effects of technological choices. We need to give up the futile predictive ambitions of previous approaches and instead base decisions on systematic studies of alternative future developments. It will then be necessary to cope with mere possibility arguments, i.e., arguments in which a conclusion is drawn from a mere possibility that a course of action may have certain consequences. A five-step procedure…Read more
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89Crop Biotechnology for the Environment?Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 26 (4): 759-770. 2013.In public debates, agricultural biotechnology is almost invariably discussed as a potential threat to the environment and to human health. Without downplaying the risks associated with this technology we emphasize that if properly regulated, it can be a forceful tool to solve environmental problems and promote human health. Agricultural biotechnology can reduce environmental problems in at least three ways: it can diminish the need for environmentally damaging agricultural practices such as pest…Read more
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68A Theoria Bibliography: Swedish Theses in Philosophy in the Year 2000Theoria 67 (3): 281-285. 2001.
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Are natural risks less dangerous than technological risks?Philosophia Naturalis 40 (1): 43-54. 2003.
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42Blockage RevisionJournal of Logic, Language and Information 25 (1): 37-50. 2016.Blockage revision is a version of descriptor revision, i.e. belief change in which a belief set K is changed with inputs whose success conditions are metalinguistic expressions containing the belief predicate \. This is a highly general framework that allows a single revision operator \ to take inputs corresponding to sentential revision ), contraction ) as well as more complex and composite operations. In blockage revision, such an operation is based on a relation \ of blockage among the set of…Read more
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96Blockage ContractionJournal of Philosophical Logic 42 (2): 415-442. 2013.Blockage contraction is an operation of belief contraction that acts directly on the outcome set, i.e. the set of logically closed subsets of the original belief set K that are potential contraction outcomes. Blocking is represented by a binary relation on the outcome set. If a potential outcome X blocks another potential outcome Y, and X does not imply the sentence p to be contracted, then Y ≠ K ÷ p. The contraction outcome K ÷ p is equal to the (unique) inclusion-maximal unblocked element of t…Read more
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45Acceptable premises. An epistemic approach to an informal logic problemHistory and Philosophy of Logic 27 (2): 209-210. 2006.
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132Coherentist ContractionJournal of Philosophical Logic 29 (3). 2000.A model of coherentist belief contraction is constructed. The outcome of belief contraction is required to be one of the coherent subsets of the original belief set, and a set of plausible properties is proposed for this set of coherent subsets. The contraction operators obtained in this way are shown to coincide with well-known belief base operations. This connection between coherentist and "foundationalist" approaches to belief change has important implications for the philosophical interpreta…Read more
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162Belief contraction without recoveryStudia Logica 50 (2). 1991.The postulate of recovery is commonly regarded to be the intuitively least compelling of the six basic Gärdenfors postulates for belief contraction. We replace recovery by the seemingly much weaker postulate of core-retainment, which ensures that if x is excluded from K when p is contracted, then x plays some role for the fact that K implies p. Surprisingly enough, core-retainment together with four of the other Gärdenfors postulates implies recovery for logically closed belief sets. Reasonable …Read more
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184Should Probabilistic Design Replace Safety Factors?Philosophy and Technology 24 (2): 151-168. 2011.Should Probabilistic Design Replace Safety Factors? Content Type Journal Article Pages 151-168 DOI 10.1007/s13347-010-0003-6 Authors Neelke Doorn, Department of Technology, Policy and Management, Delft University of Technology, PO Box 5015, 2600 GA Delft, The Netherlands Sven Ove Hansson, Department of Philosophy and the History of Technology, Royal Institute of Technology, Teknikringen 78 B, 100 44 Stockholm, Sweden Journal Philosophy & Technology Online ISSN 2210-5441 Print ISSN 2210-5433 Jour…Read more
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85Bootstrap ContractionStudia Logica 101 (5): 1013-1029. 2013.We can often specify how we would contract by a certain sentence by saying that this contraction would coincide with some other contraction that we know how to perform. We can for instance clarify that our contraction by p&q would coincide with our contraction by p, or by q, or by {p, q}. In a framework where the set of potential outcomes is known, some contractions are “self-evident” in the sense that there is only one serious candidate that can be the outcome of such a contraction. Contraction…Read more
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66A Plea for AccuracyJournal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 8 (3): 221-224. 1998.ABSTRACT In his paper ?On Having Bad Contractions, Or: No Room for Recovery? [Te97], N. Tennant attacks the AGM research program of belief revision. We show that he misrepresents the state of affairs in this field of research
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A Note On Anti-cyclic Properties Of Complete Binary RelationsReports on Mathematical Logic 41-44. 1993.A simplified notation is introduced for transitivity and related properties of binary relations. Interrelations of such properties can be proved in a facilitated way with manipulation-rules that the new notation makes possible.
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94A procedural model of votingTheory and Decision 32 (3): 269-301. 1992.The formal framework of social choice theory is generalized through the introduction of separate representations of preferences and choices. This makes it possible to treat voting as a procedure in which decisions are actually made by interacting participants, rather than as a mere mechanism for aggregation. The extended framework also allows for non-consequentialist preferences that take procedural factors into account. Concepts such as decisiveness, anonymity, neutrality, and stability are red…Read more
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128A new semantical approach to the logic of preferenceErkenntnis 31 (1). 1989.A possible world semantics for preference is developed. The remainder operator () is used to give precision to the notion that two states of the world are as similar as possible, given a specified difference between them. A general structure is introduced for preference relations between states of affairs, and three types of such preference relations are defined. It is argued that one of them, actual preference, corresponds closely to the concept of preference in informal discourse. Its logical …Read more
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3Beyond Recovery? A Reply to TennantErkenntnis 49 (3): 387-392. 1998.In his paper 'Changing the Theory of Theory Change: Reply to My Critics', N. Tennant (1997b) reacts to the critical reception of an earlier article of his. The present note rectifies some of the most serious misrepresentations in Tennant's reply
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