•  44
    Is Philosophy Losing Ground?
    Theoria 66 (1): 1-2. 2000.
  •  164
    Ideal Worlds — Wishful Thinking in Deontic Logic
    Studia Logica 82 (3): 329-336. 2006.
    The ideal world semantics of standard deontic logic identifies our obligations with how we would act in an ideal world. However, to act as if one lived in an ideal world is bad moral advice, associated with wishful thinking rather than well-considered moral deliberation. Ideal world semantics gives rise to implausible logical principles, and the metaphysical arguments that have been put forward in its favour turn out to be based on a too limited view of truth-functional representation. It is arg…Read more
  •  105
    In defense of base contraction
    Synthese 91 (3). 1992.
    In the most common approaches to belief dynamics, states of belief are represented by sets that are closed under logical consequence. In an alternative approach, they are represented by non-closed belief bases. This representation has attractive properties not shared by closed representations. Most importantly, it can account for repeated belief changes that have not yet been satisfactorily accounted for in the closed approach.
  •  126
    Logic of belief revision
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2008.
  •  292
    Kernel contraction
    Journal of Symbolic Logic 59 (3): 845-859. 1994.
    Kernel contraction is a natural nonrelational generalization of safe contraction. All partial meet contractions are kernel contractions, but the converse relationship does not hold. Kernel contraction is axiomatically characterized. It is shown to be better suited than partial meet contraction for formal treatments of iterated belief change
  •  40
    In praise of full meet contraction
    Análisis Filosófico 26 (1): 134-146. 2006.
    Full meet contraction, that was devised by Carlos Alchourrón and David Makinson in the early 1980' s, has often been overlooked since it is not in itself a plausible contraction operator. However, it is a highly useful building-block in the construction of composite contraction operators. In particular, all plausible contraction operators can be reconstructed so that the outcome of contracting a belief set K by a sentence p is defined as K ∼ f, where ∼ is full meet contraction and f a sentential…Read more
  •  137
    Individuals and collective actions
    Theoria 52 (1-2): 87-97. 1986.
  •  77
    Finite Contractions on Infinite Belief Sets
    Studia Logica 100 (5): 907-920. 2012.
    Contractions on belief sets that have no finite representation cannot be finite in the sense that only a finite number of sentences is removed. However, such contractions can be delimited so that the actual change takes place in a logically isolated, finite-based part of the belief set. A construction that answers to this principle is introduced, and is axiomatically characterized. It turns out to coincide with specified meet contraction
  •  226
    Economic (ir)rationality in risk analysis
    Economics and Philosophy 22 (2): 231-241. 2006.
    Mainstream risk analysis deviates in at least two important respects from the rationality ideal of mainstream economics. First, expected utility maximization is not applied in a consistent way. It is applied to endodoxastic uncertainty, i.e. the uncertainty (or risk) expressed in a risk assessment, but in many cases not to metadoxastic uncertainty, i.e. uncertainty about which of several competing assessments is correct. Instead, a common approach to metadoxastic uncertainty is to only take the …Read more
  •  56
    Editorial: Belief revision theory today (review)
    Journal of Logic, Language and Information 7 (2): 123-126. 1998.
  •  381
    Formalization in philosophy
    Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 6 (2): 162-175. 2000.
    The advantages and disadvantages of formalization in philosophy are summarized. It is concluded that formalized philosophy is an endangered speciality that needs to be revitalized and to increase its interactions with non-formalized philosophy. The enigmatic style that is common in philosophical logic must give way to explicit discussions of the problematic relationship between formal models and the philosophical concepts and issues that motivated their development
  •  45
    Editorial: Popular philosophy
    Theoria 70 (2-3): 117-118. 2004.
  •  76
    Ethical Expertise
    Theoria 82 (4): 299-301. 2016.
  •  236
    How not to change the theory of theory change: A reply to Tennant
    with Hans Rott
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 46 (3): 361-380. 1995.
    A number of seminal papers on the logic of belief change by Alchourrön, Gärden-fors, and Makinson have given rise to what is now known as the AGM paradigm. The present discussion note is a response to Neil Tennant's [1994], which aims at a critical appraisal of the AGM approach and the introduction of an alternative approach. We show that important parts of Tennants's critical remarks are based on misunderstandings or on lack of information. In the course of doing this, we attend to some central…Read more
  •  105
  •  60
    Editorial: Philosophical Terminology
    Theoria 71 (4): 291-293. 2005.
  •  583
    discussions of risk contain logical and argumentative fallacies that are specific to the subject-matter. Ten such fallacies are identified, that can commonly be found in public debates on risk. They are named as follows: the sheer size fallacy, the converse sheer size fallacy, the fallacy of naturalness, the ostrich's fallacy, the proof-seeking fallacy, the delay fallacy, the technocratic fallacy, the consensus fallacy, the fallacy of pricing, and the infallability fallacy.
  •  49
    Editorial: Philosophical Seminars
    Theoria 71 (2): 89-91. 2005.
  •  1
    Essentially inconsistent concepts
    Conceptus: Zeitschrift Fur Philosophie 33 (82): 57-66. 2000.
  •  89
  •  338
    Editorial: Philosophical Schools
    Theoria. forthcoming.
    Editorial: Philosophical Schools
  •  35
    Editorial: Theoria Goes Quarterly
    Theoria 71 (1): 1-2. 2005.
  •  104
    Category-specified Value Statements
    Synthese 148 (2): 425-432. 2006.
    A value statement such as “she is a good teacher” is categoryspecified, i.e., the criteria of evaluation are specified as those that are applicable to a given category, in this case the category of teachers. In this study of categoryspecified value statements, certain categories are identified that cannot be used to specify value aspects. Special attention is paid to categories that are constituted by functional characteristics. The logical properties of value statements that refer to such categ…Read more
  •  94
    Global and Iterated Contraction and Revision: An Exploration of Uniform and Semi-Uniform Approaches (review)
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 41 (1): 143-172. 2012.
    In order to clarify the problems of iterated (global) belief change it is useful to study simple cases, in particular consecutive contractions by sentences that are both logically and epistemically independent. Models in which the selection mechanism is kept constant are much more plausible in this case than what they are in general. One such model, namely uniform specified meet contraction, has the advantage of being closely connected with the AGM model. Its properties seem fairly adequate for …Read more
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  •  47
  •  113
    Hypothetical Retrospection
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 10 (2): 145-157. 2007.
    Moral theory has mostly focused on idealized situations in which the morally relevant properties of human actions can be known beforehand. Here, a framework is proposed that is intended to sharpen moral intuitions and improve moral argumentation in problems involving risk and uncertainty. Guidelines are proposed for a systematic search of suitable future viewpoints for hypothetical retrospection. In hypothetical retrospection, a decision is evaluated under the assumption that one of the branches…Read more