•  99
    On Tennant's intuitionist relevant logics
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 74 (1). 1996.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  103
    Uncertainty and vagueness/imprecision are not the same: one can be certain about events described using vague predicates and about imprecisely specified events, just as one can be uncertain about precisely specified events. Exactly because of this, a question arises about how one ought to assign probabilities to imprecisely specified events in the case when no possible available evidence will eradicate the imprecision (because, say, of the limits of accuracy of a measuring device). Modelling imp…Read more
  •  105
    Modal metaphysics and comparatives
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 70 (3). 1992.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  73
    Ron Bontekoe
    with Modal Metaphysics
    International Philosophical Quarterly 32 (2). 1992.
  •  172
    While there is now considerable experimental evidence that, on the one hand, participants assign to the indicative conditional as probability the conditional probability of consequent given antecedent and, on the other, they assign to the indicative conditional the “defective truth-table” in which a conditional with false antecedent is deemed neither true nor false, these findings do not in themselves establish which multi-premise inferences involving conditionals participants endorse. A natural…Read more
  •  295
  •  133
    Scotching the dutch book argument
    Erkenntnis 32 (1): 105--26. 1990.
    Consistent application of coherece arguments shows that fair betting quotients are subject to constraints that are too stringent to allow their identification with either degrees of belief or probabilities. The pivotal role of fair betting quotients in the Dutch Book Argument, which is said to demonstrate that a rational agent's degrees of belief are probabilities, is thus undermined from both sides.
  •  125
    Existence and Identity in Free Logic: Two Comments
    Mind 116 (464): 1079-1082. 2007.
    Professor Tennant and I agree on much regarding the proof-theoretic semantics of free logic. Here I point to two issues, one on which we disagree, the other on which I find it hard to say how closely we may agree. The first concerns the exact content of Tennant's Rule of Atomic Denotation. The second concerns the nature of assumptions whose formal counterparts contain parametric occurrences of names
  •  69
    Reviews (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 34 (3): 312-313. 1983.
  •  57
    From Introduction: In a 1968 article, ‘Probability Measures of Fuzzy Events’, Lotfi Zadeh pro-posed accounts of absolute and conditional probability for fuzzy sets (Zadeh, 1968)
  •  32
    Operations are punctuation marks'
    In Peter Sullivan & Michael Potter (eds.), Wittgenstein's Tractatus: History and Interpretation, Oxford University Press. pp. 97. 2013.
  •  163
    A note on scale invariance
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 34 (1): 49-55. 1983.
    A note on scale invariance.
  •  153
    On the completeness of non-philonian stoic logic
    History and Philosophy of Logic 16 (1): 39-64. 1995.
    The majority of formal accounts attribute to Stoic logicians the classical truth-functional understanding of the material conditional and exclusive disjunction.These interpretations were disputed,...
  •  127
    The foundations of probability and quantum mechanics
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 22 (2). 1993.
    Taking as starting point two familiar interpretations of probability, we develop these in a perhaps unfamiliar way to arrive ultimately at an improbable claim concerning the proper axiomatization of probability theory: the domain of definition of a point-valued probability distribution is an orthomodular partially ordered set. Similar claims have been made in the light of quantum mechanics but here the motivation is intrinsically probabilistic. This being so the main task is to investigate what …Read more
  •  171
    Hartry field on measurement and intrinsic explanation
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 37 (3): 340-346. 1986.
  •  86
    Reply to Currie
    Mind 97 (387): 457-460. 1988.
  •  199
    Probability as a Measure of Information Added
    Journal of Logic, Language and Information 21 (2): 163-188. 2012.
    Some propositions add more information to bodies of propositions than do others. We start with intuitive considerations on qualitative comparisons of information added . Central to these are considerations bearing on conjunctions and on negations. We find that we can discern two distinct, incompatible, notions of information added. From the comparative notions we pass to quantitative measurement of information added. In this we borrow heavily from the literature on quantitative representations o…Read more
  •  325
    Bruno de finetti and the logic of conditional events
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 48 (2): 195-232. 1997.
    This article begins by outlining some of the history—beginning with brief remarks of Quine's—of work on conditional assertions and conditional events. The upshot of the historical narrative is that diverse works from various starting points have circled around a nexus of ideas without convincingly tying them together. Section 3 shows how ideas contained in a neglected article of de Finetti's lead to a unified treatment of the topics based on the identification of conditional events as the object…Read more
  •  482
    Not every truth has a truthmaker
    Analysis 65 (3). 2005.
    First paragraph: Truthmaker theory maintains that for every truth there is something, some thing, some entity, that makes it true. Balking at the prospect that logical truths are made true by any particular thing, a consequence that may in fact be hard to avoid (see Restall 1996, Read 2000), this principle of truthmaking is sometimes restricted to (logically) contingent truths. I aim to show that even in its restricted form, the principle is provably false
  •  83
    Annabel and the bookmaker: An everyday tale of bayesian folk
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 69 (1). 1991.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  426
    II—Peter Milne: What is the Normative Role of Logic?
    Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 83 (1): 269-298. 2009.
    In making assertions one takes on commitments to the consistency of what one asserts and to the logical consequences of what one asserts. Although there is no quick link between belief and assertion, the dialectical requirements on assertion feed back into normative constraints on those beliefs that constitute one's evidence. But if we are not certain of many of our beliefs and that uncertainty is modelled in terms of probabilities, then there is at least prima facie incoherence between the norm…Read more
  •  251
    Tarski, truth and model theory
    Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99 (2). 1999.
    As Wilfrid Hodges has observed, there is no mention of the notion truth-in-a-model in Tarski's article 'The Concept of Truth in Formalized Languages'; nor does truth make many appearances in his papers on model theory from the early 1950s. In later papers from the same decade, however, this reticence is cast aside. Why should Tarski, who defined truth for formalized languages and pretty much founded model theory, have been so reluctant to speak of truth in a model? What might explain the change …Read more
  •  136
    From the point of view of proof-theoretic semantics, we examine the logical background invoked by Neil Tennant's abstractionist realist account of mathematical existence. To prepare the way, we must first look closely at the rule of existential elimination familiar from classical and intuitionist logics and at rules governing identity. We then examine how well free logics meet the harmony and uniqueness constraints familiar from the proof-theoretic semantics project. Tennant assigns a special ro…Read more
  •  43
    Reviews (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 35 (1): 312-313. 1984.
  •  104
    Counterparts and Comparatives
    Analysis 53 (2). 1993.
  •  315
    A note on Popper, propensities, and the two-slit experiment
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 36 (1): 66-70. 1985.