Phil 148
Philosophy of Probability and Induction
Spring 2003
Professor Paolo Mancosu
Office: 233 Moses Hall
Phone: 642-5033
E-mail: mancosu@socrates.berkeley.edu
Class meets:
Office hours:
Course Description
The course is an introduction to the area of inductive logic and related topics. It is divided into three parts. The first part discusses some basic forms of deductive and inductive inferences and introduces the mathematical calculus of probability. The second part of the course is devoted to a) the problem of the justification of induction and b) the analysis of the notion of confirmation. This part will include discussion of Hume’s position on induction and of Goodman’s paradox. In the third part of the course we will discuss the major foundational views in probability, that is the classical, frequentist, logical, and subjectivist theories.
Prerequisites: Phil 12A (or equivalent) [no exceptions!] and at least another course in philosophy
Syllabus
Week 1: Introduction; Inductive and deductive Logic (ch. 1)
Week 2: Some basic forms of inductive inference, (ch.2)
Week 3: Causal inference, (ch.2)
Week 4: Probability, (ch.3)
Week 5: Probability, (ch.3)
Week 6: The justification of induction, (ch. 5)
Week 7: The justification of induction (ch. 5)
Week 8: Confirmation and its problems, (ch. 6)
Week 9: Confirmation and its problems (ch. 6)
Week 10: Probability and expected value, (ch. 4)
Week 11: Probability and expected value (ch. 4)
Week 12: Theories of probability, (ch. 7)
Week 13: Theories of probability (ch. 7)
Week 14: Theories of probability (ch. 7)
Week 15: Review
Textbooks
W. Gustason, Reasoning from Evidence, Macmillan, 1994. The book is out of print but it is available as a packet of readings at Copy Central on Bancroft.
There will be another packet of readings, available later in the semester, on the justification of induction, confirmation, and conceptions of probability (Hume, Goodman, Black, Ramsey, von Mises, Keynes etc.)
Updated on 2024-08-31 15:51:12 -0700 by Paolo Mancosu