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99Disjunction and Disjunctive SyllogismCanadian Journal of Philosophy 28 (1). 1998.The validity of argument by disjunctive syllogism has been denied by proponents of relevant and paraconsistent logic. DS is stigmatised for its role in inferences — most notably C.I. Lewis's derivation of that fallacy of irrelevance ex falso quodlibet — that involve both it and other rules of inference governing disjunction, or, to speak more precisely, other rules of inference taken to apply to the very same disjunction that obeys DS. In avoiding these inferences the road less travelled is to d…Read more
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192Schlesinger On Justified Belief And ProbabilityAnalysis 49 (January): 11-16. 1989.George schlesinger has characterized justified belief probabilistically. I question the propriety of this characterization and demonstrate that with respect to it certain principles of epistemic logic that he considers plausible are unsound.
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87Notes on Teaching LogicDiscourse: Learning and Teaching in Philosophical and Religious Studies 4 (1): 137-158hese notes don’t reach any conclusions. Their purpose is to point to issues one needs to think through seriously when thinking about logic teaching. They indicate some of the relevant literature where some of these issues are addressed, but they also raise points that seem to have been overlooked. They aim to promote informed discussion. That indeed was their origin: they are descended from an internal discussion document prepared a few years ago when the then Department of Philosophy at the Uni…Read more
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129Is there a logic of confirmation transfer?Erkenntnis 53 (3): 309-335. 2000.This article begins by exploring a lost topic in the philosophy of science:the properties of the relations evidence confirming h confirmsh'' and, more generally, evidence confirming each ofh1, h2, ..., hm confirms at least one of h1, h2,ldots;, hn''.The Bayesian understanding of confirmation as positive evidential relevanceis employed throughout. The resulting formal system is, to say the least, oddlybehaved. Some aspects of this odd behaviour the system has in common withsome of the non-classic…Read more
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75Minimal doxastic logic: probabilistic and other completeness theoremsNotre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 34 (4): 499-526. 1993.
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223Frege, informative identities, and logicismBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 40 (2): 155-166. 1989.
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181The design inference: Eliminating chance through small probabilitiesBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 52 (4): 801-808. 2001.
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306Classical harmony: Rules of inference and the meaning of the logical constantsSynthese 100 (1). 1994.The thesis that, in a system of natural deduction, the meaning of a logical constant is given by some or all of its introduction and elimination rules has been developed recently in the work of Dummett, Prawitz, Tennant, and others, by the addition of harmony constraints. Introduction and elimination rules for a logical constant must be in harmony. By deploying harmony constraints, these authors have arrived at logics no stronger than intuitionist propositional logic. Classical logic, they maint…Read more
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172Russell's completeness proofHistory and Philosophy of Logic 29 (1): 31-62. 2008.Bertrand Russell’s 1906 article ‘The Theory of Implication’ contains an algebraic weak completeness proof for classical propositional logic. Russell did not present it as such. We give an exposition of the proof and investigate Russell’s view of what he was about, whether he could have appreciated the proof for what it is, and why there is no parallel of the proof in Principia Mathematica
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103Bets and Boundaries: Assigning Probabilities to Imprecisely Specified EventsStudia Logica 90 (3): 425-453. 2008.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
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99On Tennant's intuitionist relevant logicsAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 74 (1). 1996.This Article does not have an abstract
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105Modal metaphysics and comparativesAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 70 (3). 1992.This Article does not have an abstract
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172Indicative conditionals, conditional probabilities, and the “defective truth-table”: A request for more experimentsThinking and Reasoning 18 (2): 196-224. 2012.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
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125Existence and Identity in Free Logic: Two CommentsMind 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
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133Scotching the dutch book argumentErkenntnis 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.
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57From 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)
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163A note on scale invarianceBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 34 (1): 49-55. 1983.A note on scale invariance.
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32Operations are punctuation marks'In Peter Sullivan & Michael Potter (eds.), Wittgenstein's Tractatus: History and Interpretation, Oxford University Press. pp. 97. 2013.
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153On the completeness of non-philonian stoic logicHistory 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,...
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171Hartry field on measurement and intrinsic explanationBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science 37 (3): 340-346. 1986.
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127The foundations of probability and quantum mechanicsJournal 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