Credence for Epistemic Discourse

Abstract

Many recent theories of epistemic discourse exploit an informational notion of consequence, i.e. a notion that defines entailment as preservation of support by an information state. This paper investigates how informational consequence fits with probabilistic reasoning. I raise two problems. First, all informational inferences that are not also classical inferences are, intuitively, probabilistically invalid. Second, all these inferences can be exploited, in a systematic way, to generate triviality results. The informational theorist is left with two options, both of them radical: they can either deny that epistemic modal claims have probability at all, or they can move to a nonstandard probability theory.

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Paolo Santorio
University of Maryland, College Park

Citations of this work

A Suppositional Theory of Conditionals.Sam Carter - 2021 - Mind 130 (520):1059–1086.

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References found in this work

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Common ground.Robert Stalnaker - 2002 - Linguistics and Philosophy 25 (5):701-721.
Epistemic Modals.Seth Yalcin - 2007 - Mind 116 (464):983-1026.

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