Colin Howson

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Colin Howson



Average rating: 3.59 · 78 ratings · 10 reviews · 7 distinct works
Scientific Reasoning: The B...

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3.67 avg rating — 43 ratings — published 1988 — 9 editions
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Logic with Trees: An Introd...

3.76 avg rating — 17 ratings — published 1997 — 17 editions
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Hume's Problems: Induction ...

3.50 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 2000 — 7 editions
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Objecting to God

3.50 avg rating — 10 ratings — published 2011 — 8 editions
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Method and Appraisal in the...

did not like it 1.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 1976 — 7 editions
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By Colin Howson Logic with ...

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Scientific Reasoning: The B...

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“One of the recent arguments from design, that based on the so-called fine-tuning life of some fundamental physical constants, founders on the following objections: an extremely small prior probability merited by the God of theism in light – if that is the right word – of the Problem of Evil; the fact that it is not unreasonable to place a substantial probability on the hypothesis that a future theory will fix those values; and the sheer incoherence of computations of the ‘chances’ of fine-tuning were there no fine-tuner.”
Colin Howson, Objecting to God

“Although Ramsey's and de Finetti's accounts endowed an agent's probabilities with a purely subjective status they knew that, for from rendering those quantities scientifically valueless, the condition of consistency combined with the rule of conditionalization supports a powerful new epistemology called Bayesian epistemology. Its scientific appeal lies principally in two features: (i) so-called Bayesian networks are not only extremely powerful diagnostic tools but also provide the formal basis of some of the most revolutionary developments in AI; (ii) in fairly general circumstances agents with different initial, or prior, probability functions will, with enough new information, find their updated probabilities converging; in this way, it is claimed, objectivity is realized as an emergent property of consistent subjective assignments.”
Colin Howson



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