[ Acknowledgements | Introduction | Part One | Part Two | Part Three | Appendix ]
It may be helpful to the reader to bring together here for reference, all the various theses to be discussed in Part Three.
The main ones are the following:
Hume's Inductive Scepticism (8): For all e and h such that the argument from e to h is inductive, P(h, e.t) = P(h, t).
Deductivism (6): For all e and h such that the argument from e to h is invalid, P(h, e.t) = P(h, t).
Inductive Fallibilism (9): For all e1, e2 and h such that the argument from e1 to h is inductive and e2 is observational, P(h, e1.t) < 1 and P(h, e1.e2.t) < 1.
These three theses are the subjects respectively of Chapters 5, 6, and 7.
Two other theses referred to fairly often in what follows are:
the Thesis of Regularity: For all contingent h, P(h, t) < 1.
the Fundamental Thesis of the Theory of Logical Probability: There exist e1, e2, h1, h2 such that P(h1, e1.t) < 1, P(h2, e2.t) < 1, and P(h1, e1.t) != P(h2, e2.t).
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