Gregory Wheeler

Frankfurt School Of Finance And Management
  •  320
    Two compelling principles, the Reasonable Range Principle and the Preservation of Irrelevant Evidence Principle, are necessary conditions that any response to peer disagreements ought to abide by. The Reasonable Range Principle maintains that a resolution to a peer disagreement should not fall outside the range of views expressed by the peers in their dispute, whereas the Preservation of Irrelevant Evidence Principle maintains that a resolution strategy should be able to preserve unanimous judgm…Read more
  •  209
    Conditionals and consequences
    with Henry E. Kyburg and Choh Man Teng
    Journal of Applied Logic 5 (4): 638-650. 2007.
    We examine the notion of conditionals and the role of conditionals in inductive logics and arguments. We identify three mistakes commonly made in the study of, or motivation for, non-classical logics. A nonmonotonic consequence relation based on evidential probability is formulated. With respect to this acceptance relation some rules of inference of System P are unsound, and we propose refinements that hold in our framework.
  •  322
    Focused correlation and confirmation
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 60 (1): 79-100. 2009.
    This essay presents results about a deviation from independence measure called focused correlation . This measure explicates the formal relationship between probabilistic dependence of an evidence set and the incremental confirmation of a hypothesis, resolves a basic question underlying Peter Klein and Ted Warfield's ‘truth-conduciveness’ problem for Bayesian coherentism, and provides a qualified rebuttal to Erik Olsson's claim that there is no informative link between correlation and confirmati…Read more
  •  261
    Causation, Association, and Confirmation
    In Stephan Hartmann, Marcel Weber, Wenceslao Gonzalez, Dennis Dieks & Thomas Uebe (eds.), Explanation, Prediction, and Confirmation, Springer. pp. 37--51. 2011.
    Many philosophers of science have argued that a set of evidence that is "coherent" confirms a hypothesis which explains such coherence. In this paper, we examine the relationships between probabilistic models of all three of these concepts: coherence, confirmation, and explanation. For coherence, we consider Shogenji's measure of association (deviation from independence). For confirmation, we consider several measures in the literature, and for explanation, we turn to Causal Bayes Nets and resor…Read more
  •  55
    Introduction
    Journal of Applied Logic 5 (4): 575-576. 2007.
  •  262
    Models, Models, and Models
    Metaphilosophy 44 (3): 293-300. 2013.
    Michael Dummett famously maintained that analytic philosophy was simply philosophy that followed Frege in treating the philosophy of language as the basis for all other philosophy (1978, 441). But one important insight to emerge from computer science is how difficult it is to animate the linguistic artifacts that the analysis of thought produces. Yet, modeling the effects of thought requires a new skill that goes beyond analysis: procedural literacy. Some of the most promising research in philos…Read more
  •  1432
    Demystifying Dilation
    Erkenntnis 79 (6): 1305-1342. 2014.
    Dilation occurs when an interval probability estimate of some event E is properly included in the interval probability estimate of E conditional on every event F of some partition, which means that one’s initial estimate of E becomes less precise no matter how an experiment turns out. Critics maintain that dilation is a pathological feature of imprecise probability models, while others have thought the problem is with Bayesian updating. However, two points are often overlooked: (1) knowing that …Read more
  •  138
    The structural view of rational acceptance is a commitment to developing a logical calculus to express rationally accepted propositions sufficient to represent valid argument forms constructed from rationally accepted formulas. This essay argues for this project by observing that a satisfactory solution to the lottery paradox and the paradox of the preface calls for a theory that both (i) offers the facilities to represent accepting less than certain propositions within an interpreted artificial…Read more
  •  84
    Epistemology and artificial intelligence
    Journal of Applied Logic 2 (4): 469-493. 2004.
  •  163
    Applied Logic without Psychologism
    Studia Logica 88 (1): 137-156. 2008.
    Logic is a celebrated representation language because of its formal generality. But there are two senses in which a logic may be considered general, one that concerns a technical ability to discriminate between different types of individuals, and another that concerns constitutive norms for reasoning as such. This essay embraces the former, permutation-invariance conception of logic and rejects the latter, Fregean conception of logic. The question of how to apply logic under this pure invarianti…Read more
  •  237
    Modeling of Phenomena and Dynamic Logic of Phenomena
    with Boris Kovalerchuk and Leonid Perlovsky
    Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logic 22 (1): 1-82. 2011.
    Modeling a complex phenomena such as the mind presents tremendous computational complexity challenges. Modeling field theory (MFT) addresses these challenges in a non-traditional way. The main idea behind MFT is to match levels of uncertainty of the model (also, a problem or some theory) with levels of uncertainty of the evaluation criterion used to identify that model. When a model becomes more certain, then the evaluation criterion is adjusted dynamically to match that change to the model. Th…Read more
  •  233
    Formal Epistemology
    In Jonathan Dancy, Ernest Sosa & Matthias Steup (eds.), A companion to epistemology, Wiley-blackwell. 2010.
    Yet, in broader terms, formal epistemology is not merely a methodological tool for epistemologists, but a discipline in its own right. On this programmatic view, formal epistemology is an interdisciplinary research program that covers work by philosophers, mathematicians, computer scientists, statisticians, psychologists, operations researchers, and economists who aim to give mathematical and sometimes computational representations of, along with sound strategies for reasoning about, knowledge, …Read more
  •  90
    New Challenges to Philosophy of Science (edited book)
    with Hanne Andersen, Dennis Dieks, Wenceslao J. Gonzalez, and Thomas Uebel
    Springer Verlag. 2013.
    This fourth volume of the Programme “The Philosophy of Science in a European Perspective” deals with new challenges in this field. In this regard, it seeks to broaden the scope of the philosophy of science in two directions. On the one hand,...
  •  104
    Humanists and Scientists
    The Reasoner 1 (1). 2007.
    C.P. Snow observed that universities are largely made up of two broad types of people, literary intellectuals and scientists, yet a typical individual of each type is barely able, if able at all, to communicate with his counterpart. Snow's observation, popularized in his 1959 lecture Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution (reissued by Cambridge 1993), goes some way to explaining the two distinct cultures one hears referred to as "the humanities" and "the sciences." Snow's lecture is a study …Read more
  •  45
    Announcement
    Minds and Machines 24 (4): 477-477. 2014.
  •  334
    Objective Bayesian Calibration and the Problem of Non-convex Evidence
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 63 (4): 841-850. 2012.
    Jon Williamson's Objective Bayesian Epistemology relies upon a calibration norm to constrain credal probability by both quantitative and qualitative evidence. One role of the calibration norm is to ensure that evidence works to constrain a convex set of probability functions. This essay brings into focus a problem for Williamson's theory when qualitative evidence specifies non-convex constraints.
  •  254
    Both dilation and non-conglomerability have been alleged to conflict with a fundamental principle of Bayesian methodology that we call \textit{Good's Principle}: one should always delay making a terminal decision between alternative courses of action if given the opportunity to first learn, at zero cost, the outcome of an experiment relevant to the decision. In particular, both dilation and non-conglomerability have been alleged to permit or even mandate choosing to make a terminal decision in …Read more
  •  103
    Rational acceptance and conjunctive/disjunctive absorption
    Journal of Logic, Language and Information 15 (1-2): 49-63. 2006.
    A bounded formula is a pair consisting of a propositional formula φ in the first coordinate and a real number within the unit interval in the second coordinate, interpreted to express the lower-bound probability of φ. Converting conjunctive/disjunctive combinations of bounded formulas to a single bounded formula consisting of the conjunction/disjunction of the propositions occurring in the collection along with a newly calculated lower probability is called absorption. This paper introduces two …Read more
  •  71
    Erratum to: Introduction
    Synthese 187 (2): 815-815. 2012.
  •  106
    A Resource-bounded Default Logic
    In J. Delgrande & T. Schaub (eds.), Proceedings of NMR 2004, Aaai. 2004.
    This paper presents statistical default logic, an expansion of classical (i.e., Reiter) default logic that allows us to model common inference patterns found in standard inferential statistics, including hypothesis testing and the estimation of a populations mean, variance and proportions. The logic replaces classical defaults with ordered pairs consisting of a Reiter default in the first coordinate and a real number within the unit interval in the second coordinate. This real number represents a…Read more
  •  78
    Modelling phenomena and dynamic logic of phenomena
    with Boris Kovalerchuk and Leonid Perlovsky
    Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 22 (1-2): 53-82. 2012.
    Modelling a complex phenomenon such as the mind presents tremendous computational complexity challenges. Modelling field theory addresses these challenges in a non-traditional way. The main idea behind MFT is to match levels of uncertainty of the model with levels of uncertainty of the evaluation criterion used to identify that model. When a model becomes more certain, then the evaluation criterion is adjusted dynamically to match that change to the model. This process is called the Dynamic Logi…Read more
  •  1151
    Is there a logic of information?
    Journal of Theoretical and Applied Artificial Intelligence 27 (1): 95-98. 2015.
    Information-based epistemology maintains that ‘being informed’ is an independent cognitive state that cannot be reduced to knowledge or to belief, and the modal logic KTB has been proposed as a model. But what distinguishes the KTB analysis of ‘being informed’, the Brouwersche schema (B), is precisely its downfall, for no logic of information should include (B) and, more generally, no epistemic logic should include (B), either.
  •  219
    Additionally, the text shows how to develop computationally feasible methods to mesh with this framework.
  •  246
    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
  •  11
    Editorial
    Minds and Machines 21 (1): 1-2. 2011.
  •  143
    AGM Belief Revision in Monotone Modal Logics
    LPAR 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
  •  272
    Why the Hardest Logic Puzzle Ever Cannot Be Solved in Less than Three Questions
    with Pedro Barahona
    Journal 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