Title of article
Commutativity or Holism? A Dilemma for Conditionalizers
Author/Authors
Jonathan Weisberg، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
20
From page
793
To page
812
Abstract
Conditionalization and Jeffrey Conditionalization cannot simultaneously satisfy two
widely held desiderata on rules for empirical learning. The first desideratum is confirmational
holism, which says that the evidential import of an experience is always sensitive to
our background assumptions. The second desideratum is commutativity, which says that
the order in which one acquires evidence shouldn’t affect what conclusions one draws,
provided the same total evidence is gathered in the end. (Jeffrey) Conditionalization
cannot satisfy either of these desiderata without violating the other. This is a surprising
problem, and I offer a diagnosis of its source. I argue that (Jeffrey) Conditionalization is
inherently anti-holistic in a way that is just exacerbated by the requirement of commutativity.
The dilemma is thus a superficial manifestation of (Jeffrey) Conditionalization’s
fundamentally anti-holistic nature.
Journal title
The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
Record number
708528
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