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Clark Glymour

Carnegie Mellon University
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 More details
  • Carnegie Mellon University
    Department of Philosophy
    Retired faculty
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America
  • All publications (219)
  • The Frame Problem, and a Few
    In Kenneth M. Ford & Zenon W. Pylyshyn (eds.), The Robot's Dilemma Revisited: The Frame Problem in Artificial Intelligence, Ablex. pp. 25. 1994.
    The Frame Problem
  •  126
    Reliability, Realism, and Relativism
    with Kevin T. Kelly and Cory Juhl
    Kevin T. Kelly, Cory Juhl and Clark Glymour. Reliability, Realism, and Relativism
    Realism and Anti-Realism
  •  96
    Moral errors
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (1): 17-18. 1994.
  •  1
    Theory and Evidence
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 32 (3): 314-318. 1981.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  53
    Clarifying the locality assumption
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (1): 69-70. 1994.
  •  21
    Why the University Should Abolish Faculty Course Evaluations
  •  392
    Instrumental Probability
    The Monist 84 (2): 284-300. 2001.
    The claims of science and the claims of probability combine in two ways. In one, probability is part of the content of science, as in statistical mechanics and quantum theory and an enormous range of "models" developed in applied statistics. In the other, probability is the tool used to explain and to justify methods of inference from records of observations, as in every science from psychiatry to physics. These intimacies between science and probability are logical sports, for while we think sc…Read more
    The claims of science and the claims of probability combine in two ways. In one, probability is part of the content of science, as in statistical mechanics and quantum theory and an enormous range of "models" developed in applied statistics. In the other, probability is the tool used to explain and to justify methods of inference from records of observations, as in every science from psychiatry to physics. These intimacies between science and probability are logical sports, for while we think science aims to say what happens, what has happened, what will happen, what would happen if other things were to happen, what could and could not happen, what will nearly happen, or what will approximate what will happen, probability claims say none of these things, or at least none of them about the phenomena with which science is concerned. On that, at least, almost all philosophical interpreters of probability since DeMoivre agree, with whatever reluctance. Consider some examples.
    Chance and Objective ProbabilityProbability in the Physical SciencesApplications of Probability, Mis…Read more
    Chance and Objective ProbabilityProbability in the Physical SciencesApplications of Probability, MiscPhilosophy of StatisticsFrequentismSubjective Probability, MiscInstrumentalism
  •  40
    Statistical Inference and Data Mining
    with David Madigan, Daniel Pregibon, and Padhraic Smyth
    Econometrics
  •  112
    Clark Glymour’s responses to the contributions to the Synthese special issue “Causation, probability, and truth: the philosophy of Clark Glymour”
    Synthese 193 (4): 1251-1285. 2016.
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