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32The American Pragmatists, by Cheryl Misak, The Oxford History of Philosophy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013, xvi + 286 pp. ISBN 978-0-19-923120-1 hb £25 (review)European Journal of Philosophy 22 (S1). 2014.
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1Gambling with Truth: An Essay on Induction and the Aims of ScienceSynthese 17 (1): 444-448. 1967.
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1611 Beware of Syllogism: Statistical Reasoning and Conjecturing According to PeirceIn Cheryl Misak (ed.), The Cambridge companion to Peirce, Cambridge University Press. pp. 257. 2004.
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1FeasibilityIn Cristina Bicchieri & Maria Luisa Dalla Chiara (eds.), Knowledge, Belief, and Strategic Interaction, Cambridge University Press. pp. 1--20. 1992.
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187Money pumps and diachronic booksProceedings of the Philosophy of Science Association 2002 (3). 2002.The idea that rational agents should have acyclic preferences and should obey conditionalization has been defended on the grounds that otherwise an agent is threatened with becoming a “money pump.” This essay argues that such arguments fail to prove their claims
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38Assessing Accident Risks in U.S. Commercial Nuclear Power Plants: Scientific Method and the Rasmussen ReportSocial Research: An International Quarterly 48. 1981.
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167Review: Illusions about Uncertainty (review)British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 36 (3). 1985.
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4Dewey's logic of inquiryIn Molly Cochran (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Dewey, Cambridge University Press. pp. 80-100. 2010.
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29Dissonance and Consistency according to Shackle and ShaferPSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1978. 1978.
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119Value commitments, value conflict, and the separability of belief and valuePhilosophy of Science 66 (4): 509-533. 1999.Leeds (1990) levels an objection against the criterion of rational choice I have proposed (Levi 1997, Ch. 6; 1980; 1986), pointing out that the criterion is sensitive to the way possible consequences are partitioned. Seidenfeld, Kadane and Schervish (1989) call into question the defense of the cross product rule by appeal to Pareto Unanimity Principles that I had invoked in my 1986. I offer clarifications of my proposals showing that the difference between my views and those of my critics concer…Read more
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14Inference and Logic According to PeirceIn Jacqueline Brunning & Paul Forster (eds.), The Rule of Reason: The Philosophy of C.S. Peirce, University of Toronto Press. pp. 34-56. 1997.
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534Contraction: On the Decision-Theoretical Origins of Minimal Change and EntrenchmentSynthese 152 (1): 129-154. 2006.We present a decision-theoretically motivated notion of contraction which, we claim, encodes the principles of minimal change and entrenchment. Contraction is seen as an operation whose goal is to minimize loses of informational value. The operation is also compatible with the principle that in contracting A one should preserve the sentences better entrenched than A (when the belief set contains A). Even when the principle of minimal change and the latter motivation for entrenchment figure promi…Read more
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114Contracting From Epistemic Hell is RoutineSynthese 135 (1): 141-164. 2003.I respond to Erik Olsson's critique of my account of contraction frominconsistent belief states, by admitting that such contraction cannot be rationalized as adeliberate decision problem. It can, however, be rationalized as a routine designed prior toinadvertent expansion into inconsistency when the deliberating agent embraces a consistent point of view.
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130Newcomb’s Many ProblemsTheory and Decision 6 (2): 161-175. 1975.Newcomb's paradox rests on two arguments one appealing to the principle of maximizing expected utility and one appealing to dominance in order to generate conflicting recommendations in certain kinds of choice situations. In my essay, I argue that the applications of the principle of maximizing expected utility and of the dominance principle are both fallacious and that the specification of the decision problem is too indeterminate to render a verdict between the two options considered. I also s…Read more
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151Belief and ActionThe Monist 48 (2): 306-315. 1964.“Ethics and science,” wrote Poincaré, “have their own domains, which touch but do not interpenetrate. The one shows us to what goal we should aspire, the other, given the goal, teaches us how to attain it.” Poincare’ may be mistaken in supposing that science has nothing to contribute to the selection of goals. He is surely right, however, in insisting on the relevance of the results of science to the choice of policies for realising goals already selected.
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105Escape from Boredom: Edification According to RortyCanadian Journal of Philosophy 11 (4). 1981.Richard Rorty sings in the antifoundationalist chorus. His song equates the rise of foundationalist epistemology with the professionalization of philosophy. The discordant notes he finds in the foundationalist score become, as a consequence, subversive of philosophy as an autonomous discipline.Nonetheless, the most salient feature of Rorty's recent book, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, is that it is by a professional philosopher, for professional philosophers and about the future of philoso…Read more
Isaac Levi
(1930 - 2018)
New York City, New York, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Epistemology |
| Philosophy of Probability |
| General Philosophy of Science |