For the Sake of the Argument
This book by one of the world's foremost philosophers in the fields of epistemology and logic offers an account of suppositional reasoning relevant to practical deliberation, explanation, prediction and hypothesis testing. Suppositions made 'for the sake of argument' sometimes conflict with our beliefs, and when they do, some beliefs are rejected and others retained. Thanks to such belief contravention, adding content to a supposition can undermine conclusions reached without it. Subversion can also arise because suppositional reasoning is ampliative. These two types of nonmonotonic logic are the focus of this book. A detailed comparison of nonmonotonicity appropriate to both belief contravening and ampliative suppositional reasoning reveals important differences that have been overlooked.
- Major selling point is that this is a book by Isaac Levi, one of the foremost authorities in epistemology and logic
- Aimed principally at philosophers, it will also interest those working in artificial intelligence
Product details
March 2011Adobe eBook Reader
9780511888298
0 pages
0kg
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Unextended Ramsey tests
- 3. Modality without modal ontology
- 4. Aspects of conditional logic
- 5. Nonmonotonicity in belief change and suppositional reasoning
- 6. Inductive expansion
- 7. Defaults
- 8. Matters of degree
- 9. Normality and expectation
- 10. Agents and automata
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Name index
- Subject index.