In recent decades, philosophers and scientists have increasingly emphasised that belief is not (or not always) an all-or-nothing matter; our opinions about the way the world is often come in degrees. Unfortunately, theorising about the nature and reality of graded belief states has not kept up with the tremendous advances we've made in modelling their normative roles. Most formal epistemologists accept some form of probabilism, but there is no consensus regarding whether such ideals are humanly attainable, how far ordinary humans are from attaining them, or even what it would mean to attain them.
The focus of this workshop is primarily on understanding what degrees of belief are, especially as they exist in 'real', non-idealised human agents. Topics include
Speakers, Titles, Abstracts:
Registration:
Attendance is free. To ensure adequate catering, please register no later than 3rd September 2018. You can register by emailing credence.workshop@gmail.com.
Location:
The workshop will be located at Seminar Room 1, LHRI (29-31 Clarendon Place). See the map at the bottom of the page, or download a pdf map (6mb).
The focus of this workshop is primarily on understanding what degrees of belief are, especially as they exist in 'real', non-idealised human agents. Topics include
- Modelling (reasoning with) degrees of belief for logically fallible and probabilistically incoherent agents
- The conceptual and metaphysical relationships between degrees of belief and other mental states — e.g., all-or-nothing beliefs, comparative probabilities, and preferences
- The role of idealisation in probabilistic models of belief and expected utility models of choice, and how such idealisations might relate to and inform us about psychological reality
- Interpretivist approaches to understanding degrees of belief
Speakers, Titles, Abstracts:
- Russell Ahmed-Buehler, UC-Berkeley – Three Grades of Realism
- Richard Bradley, London School of Economics – From Imprecise Credence to Confidence
- Seamus Bradley, University of Leeds – Formal Epistemology: What are the rules of the game and why bother playing it?
- Edward Elliott, University of Leeds – Betting Against the Zen Monk: Preference-Centric Approaches to the Measurement of Belief
- Fredrik Haraldsen, University of Agder – Credences and the Ordinary Notion of 'Belief'
- Liz Jackson & Andrew Moon, University of Notre Dame & Virginia Commonwealth University – Credence: A Belief First Approach
- Jason Konek, University of Bristol – Epistemic Interpretationism
- Anna Mahtani, London School of Economics – Two-Dimensionalism and the Objects of Credence
- Orri Stefansson, Copenhagen – Reasoning with Unknown Possibilities (based on joint work with Katie Steele)
Registration:
Attendance is free. To ensure adequate catering, please register no later than 3rd September 2018. You can register by emailing credence.workshop@gmail.com.
Location:
The workshop will be located at Seminar Room 1, LHRI (29-31 Clarendon Place). See the map at the bottom of the page, or download a pdf map (6mb).