Inductive Logic, 1st Edition,Dov M. Gabbay,John Woods,Stephan Hartmann,ISBN9780444529367
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Volume 10: Inductive Logic, 1st Edition

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Editor(s) : Gabbay  &   Woods  &   Hartmann  

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Imprint: North Holland

ISBN: 9780444529367

Pages: 800

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Key Features

• Chapter on the Port Royal contributions to probability theory and decision theory

• Serves as a singular contribution to the intellectual history of the 20th century
• Contains the latest scholarly discoveries and interpretative insights

Description

This volume is number ten in the 11-volume Handbook of the History of Logic. While there are many examples were a science split from philosophy and became autonomous (such as physics with Newton and biology with Darwin), and while there are, perhaps, topics that are of exclusively philosophical interest, inductive logic - as this handbook attests - is a research field where philosophers and scientists fruitfully and constructively interact. This handbook covers the rich history of scientific turning points in Inductive Logic, including probability theory and decision theory. Written by leading researchers in the field, both this volume and the Handbook as a whole are definitive reference tools for senior undergraduates, graduate students and researchers in the history of logic, the history of philosophy, and any discipline, such as mathematics, computer science, cognitive psychology, and artificial intelligence, for whom the historical background of his or her work is a salient consideration.

Readership

Researchers and graduate students in all areas of logic: Historians of logic, cognitive psychologists, computer scientists, AI theorists, theorists of legal reasoning.

Dov M. Gabbay

Affiliations and Expertise

King's College London, UK

View additional works by Dov M. Gabbay

John Woods

Affiliations and Expertise

University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

View additional works by John Woods

Stephan Hartmann

Affiliations and Expertise

Tilburg University, the Netherlands

Inductive Logic, 1st Edition

Introduction (Dov Gabbay, Stephan Hartman and John Woods)

Induction before Hume (J. R. Milton)

Hume and the Problem of Induction (Marc Lange)

The Debate between Whewell and Mill on the Nature of Scientific Induction (Malcolm Forster)

An Explorer upon Untrodden Ground: Peirce on Abduction (Stathis Psillos)

The Modern Epistemic Interpretations of Probability: Logicism and Subjectivism (Maria Carla Galavotti)

Popper and Hypothetico-deductivism (Alan Musgrave)

Hempel and the Paradoxes of Confirmation (Jan Sprenger)

Carnap and the Logic of Induction (Sandy Zabell)

The Development of the Hintikka Program (Ilkka Niiniluoto)

Hans Reichenbach’s Probability Logic (Frederick Eberhardt and Clark Glymour)

Goodman and the Demise of Syntactic and Semantics Models (Robert Schwartz)

Development of Subjective Bayesianism (James Joyce)

Varieties of Bayesianism (Jonathan Weisberg)

Inductive Logic and Empirical Psychology (Nick Chater, Mike Oaksford, Ulrike Hahn and Evan Heit)

Inductive Logic and Statistics (Jan-Willem Romeijn)

Statistical Learning Theory (Ulrike von Luxburg and Bernhard Schoelkopf)

Formal Learning Theory in Context (Daniel Osherson and Scott Weinstein)

Mechanizing Induction (Ronald Ortner and Hannes Leitgeb)

Index

»
Inductive Logic