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219Probabilistic Logics and Probabilistic NetworksSynthese Library. 2010.Additionally, the text shows how to develop computationally feasible methods to mesh with this framework.
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246Methodological naturalism and epistemic internalismSynthese 163 (3): 315-328. 2008.Epistemic naturalism holds that the results or methodologies from the cognitive sciences are relevant to epistemology, and some have maintained that scientific methods are more compatible with externalist theories of justification than with internalist theories. But practically all discussions about naturalized epistemology are framed exclusively in terms of cognitive psychology, which is only one of the cognitive sciences. The question addressed in this essay is whether a commitment to naturali…Read more
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143AGM Belief Revision in Monotone Modal LogicsLPAR 2010 Short Paper Proceedings. 2010.Classical modal logics, based on the neighborhood semantics of Scott and Montague, provide a generalization of the familiar normal systems based on Kripke semantics. This paper defines AGM revision operators on several first-order monotonic modal correspondents, where each first-order correspondence language is defined by Marc Pauly’s version of the van Benthem characterization theorem for monotone modal logic. A revision problem expressed in a monotone modal system is translated into first-orde…Read more
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272Why the Hardest Logic Puzzle Ever Cannot Be Solved in Less than Three QuestionsJournal of Philosophical Logic 41 (2): 493-503. 2012.Rabern and Rabern (Analysis 68:105–112 2 ) and Uzquiano (Analysis 70:39–44 4 ) have each presented increasingly harder versions of ‘the hardest logic puzzle ever’ (Boolos The Harvard Review of Philosophy 6:62–65 1 ), and each has provided a two-question solution to his predecessor’s puzzle. But Uzquiano’s puzzle is different from the original and different from Rabern and Rabern’s in at least one important respect: it cannot be solved in less than three questions. In this paper we solve Uzquiano…Read more
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386Focused Correlation, Confirmation, and the Jigsaw Puzzle of Variable EvidencePhilosophy of Science 78 (3): 376-92. 2011.Focused correlation compares the degree of association within an evidence set to the degree of association in that evidence set given that some hypothesis is true. A difference between the confirmation lent to a hypothesis by one evidence set and the confirmation lent to that hypothesis by another evidence set is robustly tracked by a difference in focused correlations of those evidence sets on that hypothesis, provided that all the individual pieces of evidence are equally, positively relevant …Read more
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146Explaining the limits of Olsson's impossibility resultSouthern Journal of Philosophy 50 (1): 136-150. 2012.In his groundbreaking book, Against Coherence (2005), Erik Olsson presents an ingenious impossibility theorem that appears to show that there is no informative relationship between probabilistic measures of coherence and higher likelihood of truth. Although Olsson's result provides an important insight into probabilistic models of epistemological coherence, the scope of his negative result is more limited than generally appreciated. The key issue is the role conditional independence conditions p…Read more
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288A Review of the Lottery ParadoxIn William Harper & Gregory Wheeler (eds.), Probability and Inference: Essays in Honour of Henry E. Kyburg, Jr, College Publications. 2007.Henry Kyburg’s lottery paradox (1961, p. 197) arises from considering a fair 1000 ticket lottery that has exactly one winning ticket. If this much is known about the execution of the lottery it is therefore rational to accept that one ticket will win. Suppose that an event is very likely if the probability of its occurring is greater than 0.99. On these grounds it is presumed rational to accept the proposition that ticket 1 of the lottery will not win. Since the lottery is fair, it is rational t…Read more
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1585Scoring Imprecise Credences: A Mildly Immodest ProposalPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research 92 (1): 55-78. 2016.Jim Joyce argues for two amendments to probabilism. The first is the doctrine that credences are rational, or not, in virtue of their accuracy or “closeness to the truth” (1998). The second is a shift from a numerically precise model of belief to an imprecise model represented by a set of probability functions (2010). We argue that both amendments cannot be satisfied simultaneously. To do so, we employ a (slightly-generalized) impossibility theorem of Seidenfeld, Schervish, and Kadane (2012), wh…Read more
Gregory Wheeler
Frankfurt School Of Finance And Management
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Frankfurt School Of Finance And ManagementProfessor
Areas of Specialization
| Probabilistic Frameworks |
| Machine Learning |
| Formal Epistemology |