Scientific Discovery Based on Belief Revision
Martin, Eric ; Osherson, Daniel
J. Symbolic Logic, Tome 62 (1997) no. 1, p. 1352-1370 / Harvested from Project Euclid
Scientific inquiry is represented as a process of rational hypothesis revision in the face of data. For the concept of rationality, we rely on the theory of belief dynamics as developed in [5, 9]. Among other things, it is shown that if belief states are left unclosed under deductive logic then scientific theories can be expanded in a uniform, consistent fashion that allows inquiry to proceed by any method of hypothesis revision based on "kernel" contraction. In contrast, if belief states are closed under logic, then no such expansion is possible.
Publié le : 1997-12-14
Classification: 
@article{1183745386,
     author = {Martin, Eric and Osherson, Daniel},
     title = {Scientific Discovery Based on Belief Revision},
     journal = {J. Symbolic Logic},
     volume = {62},
     number = {1},
     year = {1997},
     pages = { 1352-1370},
     language = {en},
     url = {http://dml.mathdoc.fr/item/1183745386}
}
Martin, Eric; Osherson, Daniel. Scientific Discovery Based on Belief Revision. J. Symbolic Logic, Tome 62 (1997) no. 1, pp.  1352-1370. http://gdmltest.u-ga.fr/item/1183745386/