•  33
    Symmetry and belief revision
    Erkenntnis 49 (1): 21-56. 1998.
    This paper continues the recent tradition of investigating iterated AGM revision by reasoning directly about the dynamics for total pre-order (“implausibility ordering”) representations of AGM revision functions. We reorient discussion, however, by proving that symmetry considerations, almost by themselves, suffice to determine a particular, AGM-friendly implausibility ordering dynamics due to Spohn 1988, which we call “J-revision”. After exploring the connections between implausibility ordering…Read more
  •  23
    Recovery Recovered
    Journal of Philosophical Logic 29 (2). 2000.
    The most controversial condition that the AGM theory of rational belief change places on belief contraction is the recovery condition. The condition is controversial because of a series of putative counterexamples due (separately) to I. Levi and S. O. Hansson. In this paper we show that the conflicts that Levi and Hansson arrange between AGM contraction and our intuitions about how to give up beliefs are merely apparent. We argue that these conflicts disappear once we attend more closely to the …Read more
  •  7
    Semantic Determinants and Psychology as a Science
    Erkenntnis 49 (1): 57-91. 1998.
    One central but unrecognized strand of the complex debate between W. V. Quine and Donald Davidson over the status of psychology as a science turns on their disagreement concerning the compatibility of strict psychophysical, semantic-determining laws with the possibility of error. That disagreement in turn underlies their opposing views on the location of semantic determinants: proximal (on bodily surfaces) or distal (in the external world). This paper articulates these two disputes, their wider …Read more
  •  3
    Inductive Logic
    In Dale Jacquette (ed.), A Companion to Philosophical Logic, Blackwell. 2006.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Good Old‐Fashioned Inductive Logic (GOFIL): Carnap's Program Subjectivized Inductive Logic (SIL): De Finetti Regnant New‐Fangled Inductive Logic (NFIL)
  • Aspects of the Theory of Qualitative Rational Belief Change
    Dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. 1999.
    If we suppose that reasonable belief is reasonable not because it has a foundation but because it is self-correcting, and that bodies of reasonable belief are self-correctable in virtue of their web-like internal structure, then it becomes natural to ask for explicit accounts both of self-correction itself, and of the web-like internal structure that makes self-correction possible: The theory of rational belief change. ;In this essay we study qualitative, logical theories of rational belief chan…Read more