In Search for Optimal Methods: New Insights About Meta-Induction

Author:

Schurz GerhardORCID

Abstract

AbstractIn this paper, the contributions to the account of meta-induction (Schurz 2019) collected in this volume are critically discussed and thereby, new insights are developed. How broad and expandable the program of meta-induction is can be learned from Ortner’s contribution. New insights about the transition from the a priori justification of meta-induction to the a posteriori justification of object-induction emerge from the reflection of Shogenji’s paper. How meta-induction may be applied also to religious prophecies and that their meta-inductive justification does not fail for a priori reasons but because of missing evidence for predictive success is learned from the discussion of Pitts’ contribution. That meta-induction does not rely on a particular prior distribution, while the no free lunch theorem depends implicitly on a uniform prior, is the major conclusion drawn from the discussion of Wolpert’s article. How the problem of induction is treated in different versions of the Bayesian account is learned from the discussion of Willliamson’s paper. That meta-induction can also be employed for abduction, and that abductive theory-revision can offer meta-inductive aggregation methods is a new insight emerging from the reflection of Aliseda’s contribution.

Funder

Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,Philosophy

Reference44 articles.

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3. Bovens, Luc, and Stephan Hartmann. 2003. Bayesian epistemology. Oxford: OUP.

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5. Carnap, Rudolf. 1950. Logical foundations of probability. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

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