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On logically false evidence statements

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2014

Hugues Leblanc*
Affiliation:
Bryn Mawr College

Extract

Logical falsehoods are usually barred in confirmation theory from serving as evidence statements. I wish to study here some three major ways in which this restriction can be lifted.

1. Consider the following axioms for the two-argument confirmation function C:

A1. 0 ≤ C(h, e) ≤ 1;

A2. If ⊦hh′ and ⊦ee′, then C(h, e) = C(h′, e′);

A3. If ⊦eh, then C(h, e) = 1;

A4. If ⊦e ⊃ ˜(h.h′), then C(h⋁h′, e) = C(h, e)+C(h′, e);

A5. C(h.h′, e) = C(h,e)×C(h′, h.e);

where h, h′, e, and e′ are any four statements from a consistent language L and where ‘⊦’ is short for ‘is logically true in L.’ A1—A5 are consistent, as shown by the following construction:

C1. Let all four of h, h′, e, and e′ be some logical truth lt of L, and let C(h, e) equal 1 for any two h and e;

under which they become true. But they yield as consequences:

and hence

No statement e of L is logically false.

Since all the languages for which confirmation theories have been proposed contain logical falsehoods, (1) is undesirable. Restrictions must accordingly be placed upon some of A1—A5.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Symbolic Logic 1957

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References

REFERENCES

[1]Carnap, R., The continuum of inductive methods, Chicago, 1952.Google Scholar
[2]Carnap, R., Logical foundations of probability, Chicago, 1950.Google Scholar
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