In Franz Huber & Christoph Schmidt-Petri (eds.),
Degrees of belief. London: Springer. pp. 301--339 (
2009)
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Abstract
This paper combines various structures representing degrees of belief, degrees of disbelief, and degrees of non-belief (degrees of expectations) into a unified whole. The representation uses relations of comparative necessity and possibility, as well as non-probabilistic functions assigning numerical values of necessity and possibility. We define all-encompassing necessity structures which have weak expectations (mere hypotheses, guesses, conjectures, etc.) occupying the lowest ranks and very strong, ineradicable ('a priori') beliefs occupying the highest ranks. Structurally, there are no differences from the top to the bottom. I argue that belief is a vague notion, and that thresholds for belief, if there are any, are context-dependent.