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FUNDAMENTALS OF BAYESIAN EPISTEMOLOGY VOL1:INTRODUCING CREDENCES PAPER

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Bayesian ideas have recently been applied across such diverse fields as philosophy, statistics, economics, psychology, artificial intelligence, and legal theory. Fundamentals of Bayesian Epistemology examines epistemologists' use of Bayesian probability mathematics to represent degrees of belief. Michael G. Titelbaum provides an accessible introduction to the key concepts and principles of the Bayesian formalism, enabling the reader both to follow epistemological debates and to see broader implications

Volume 1 begins by motivating the use of degrees of belief in epistemology. It then introduces, explains, and applies the five core Bayesian normative rules: Kolmogorov's three probability axioms, the Ratio Formula for conditional degrees of belief, and Conditionalization for updating attitudes over time. Finally, it discusses further normative rules (such as the Principal Principle, or indifference principles) that have been proposed to supplement or replace the core five.

Volume 2 gives arguments for the five core rules introduced in Volume 1, then considers challenges to Bayesian epistemology. It begins by detailing Bayesianism's successful applications to confirmation and decision theory. Then it describes three types of arguments for Bayesian rules, based on representation theorems, Dutch Books, and accuracy measures. Finally, it takes on objections to the Bayesian approach and alternative formalisms, including the statistical approaches of frequentism and likelihoodism.

224 pages, Paperback

Published April 28, 2022

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Profile Image for Joseph Yue.
211 reviews56 followers
February 18, 2025
A good introductory text to Bayesian logic. It is fairly easy to read, and examples when given are helpful for understanding. Certain texts are, however, more obscure and lack necessary elucidation. A useful tool as it may be, though, I remain unconvinced by the claim that Bayesian calculus best captures the rational ideal of human reasoning. It is definitely more congruent to intuition and human embodied experience than traditional logic, but many human actions are unconscious or subconscious, yet contextually they can be perfectly rational actions without conforming to any kind of explicit reasoning.
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