Wolfgang Spohn presents the first full account of the dynamic laws of belief, by means of ranking theory. This book is his long-awaited presentation of ranking theory and its ramifications. He motivates and introduces the basic notion of a ranking function, which recognises degrees of belief and
at the same time accounts for belief simpliciter. He provides a measurement theory for ranking functions, accounts for auto-epistemology in ranking-theoretic terms, and explicates the basic notion of a (deductive or non-deductive) reason.
The rich philosophical applications of Spohn's
theory include: a new account of lawlikeness, an account of ceteris paribus laws, a new perspective on dispositions, a rich and detailed theory of deterministic causation, an understanding of natural modalities as an objectification of epistemic modalities, an account of the experiential basis of
belief - and thus a restructuring of the debate on foundationalism and coherentism (and externalism and contextualism) - and, finally, a revival of fundamental a priori principles of reason fathoming the basics of empiricism and the relation between reason and truth, and concluding in a proof of a
weak principle of causality. All this is accompanied by thorough comparative discussions, on a general level as well as within each topic, and in particular with respect to probability theory.
Preface
1. Introduction
2. Belief and Its Objects
3. The Probabilistic Way
4. The Representation of Belief: Some Standard Moves
5. Ranking Functions
6. Reasons and Apriority
7. Conditional Independence and Ranking Nets
8. The Measurement of Ranks
9. Supposing,
Updating, and Reflection
10. Ranks and Probabilities
11. Comparisons
12. Laws and Their Confirmation
13. Ceteris Paribus Conditions and Dispositions
14. Causation
15. Objectification
16. Justification, Perception, and Consciousness
17. The A Priori Structure of
Reasons
Bibliography
Name Index
Subject Index
There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.
Wolfgang Spohn studied philosophy, logic/philosophy of science, and mathematics at the University of Munich. He has held positions at the University of Regensburg (1986-91) and the University of Bielefeld (1991-96), and has held a chair in philosophy and philosophy of science at the University
of Konstanz since 1996. He is author of three books and over eighty papers, and editor of the journal Erkenntnis.