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Philosophy Talk: "Bayesianism and the Evidence Problem"

Lisa Cassell, University of Massachusetts/Amherst

Location

Performing Arts & Humanities Building : 456

Date & Time

February 15, 2017, 4:00 pm6:00 pm

Description

Lisa Cassell, University of Massachusetts/Amherst, "Bayesianism and the Evidence Problem": 

Bayesianism is a theory that gives us norms for how the degrees of belief we have in certain propositions---our "credences"---ought to hang together.  For instance, it tells me that if my credence that I will play baseball tomorrow is .3 and my credence that I will play basketball tomorrow is .4, then, if I believe that I will only play one or the other, my credence that I will either play baseball tomorrow or basketball tomorrow is .7.  One of Bayesianism’s most attractive features is its updating norm, which gives us a simple and powerful way of revising our beliefs in the light of new evidence.  However, Bayesians have an “Evidence Problem”: while their updating norm tells us what to do once we get evidence, it doesn’t tell us what it means to actually have evidence.  In this talk, I consider two arguments---one in support of Bayesian’s updating norm and one against it—and show that both of these arguments fail.  I go on to consider what these failures teach us about the Evidence Problem.  I conclude by considering some different ways of resolving this problem.