A hyperintensional criterion of irrelevance
pp. 2917-2930
Résumé
On one important notion of irrelevance, evidence that is irrelevant in an inquiry may rationally be discarded, and attempts to obtain evidence amount to a waste of resources if they are directed at irrelevant evidence. The familiar Bayesian criterion of irrelevance, whatever its merits, is not adequate with respect to this notion. I show that a modification of the criterion due to Ken Gemes, though a significant improvement, still has highly implausible consequences. To make progress, I argue, we need to adopt a hyperintensional conception of content. I go on to formulate a better, hyperintensional criterion of irrelevance, drawing heavily on the framework of the truthmaker conception of propositions as recently developed by Kit Fine.
Détails de la publication
Publié dans:
Kruse Andrea, Wansing Heinrich (2017) Doxastic agency and epistemic responsibility. Synthese 194 (8).
Pages: 2917-2930
DOI: 10.1007/s11229-016-1078-0
Citation complète:
Krämer Stephan, 2017, A hyperintensional criterion of irrelevance. Synthese 194 (8), Doxastic agency and epistemic responsibility, 2917-2930. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11229-016-1078-0.