•  121
    Hume, Goodman and radical inductive skepticism
    Synthese 191 (12): 2791-2813. 2014.
    Goodman concurs in Hume’s contention that no theory has any probability relative to any set of data, and offers two accounts, compatible with that contention, of how some inductive inferences are nevertheless justified. The first, framed in terms of rules of inductive inference, is well known, significantly flawed, and enmeshed in Goodman’s unfortunate entrenchment theory and view of the mind as hypothesizing at random. The second, framed in terms of characteristics of inferred theories rather t…Read more
  •  95
    Russell's New Riddle of Induction
    Philosophy 54 (207): 87-97. 1979.
    The most innovative and important parts of Bertrand Russell's Human Knowledge were the result of his first attempt in three decades to come to grips with the problem of induction, or, more generally, ‘non-demonstrative inference’. My purpose here is to argue that that work constituted giant progress on the problem; if I succeed, something will have been done to restore this work to its proper place in the history of philosophy and, correlatively, to rearrange that history.
  •  148
    The inverted spectrum
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 64 (4): 471-6. 1986.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  70
    Nozick on skepticism
    Philosophia 16 (1): 65-69. 1986.