Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Logic
vol. 10: Inductive Logic
ed. by Dov Gabbay, Stephan Hartmann and John Woods
Table of contents
- Dov Gabbay, Stephan Hartmann and John Woods: Preface
- John Milton: Induction Before Hume
- Marc Lange: Hume and the Problem of Induction
- Malcolm Forster: The Whewell-Mill Debatte on Induction: Its Relevance for Philosophy of Science Today
- Stathis Psillos: An Explorer upon Untrodden Ground: Peirce on Abduction
- Maria Carla Galavotti: The Modern Epistemic Interpretations of Probability: Logicism and Subjectivism
- Alan Musgrave: Popper and Hypothetico-Deductivism
- Jan Sprenger: Hempel and the Paradoxes of Confirmation
- Sandy Zabell: Carnap and the Logic of Inductive Inference
- Ilkka Niiniluoto: The Development of the Hintikka Program
- Frederick Eberhardt and Clark Glymour: Hans Reichenbach’s Probability Logic
- Robert Schwartz: Goodman and the Demise of the Syntactic Approach
- James Joyce: The Development of Subjective Bayesianism
- Jonathan Weisberg: Varieties of Bayesianism
- Nick Chater, Mike Oaksford, Ulrike Hahn and Evan Heit: Inductive Logic and Empirical Psychology
- Jan-Willem Romeijn: Statistics as Inductive Inference
- Daniel Osherson and Scott Weinstein: Formal Learning Theory in Context
- Ronald Ortner and Hannes Leitgeb: Mechanizing Induction
- Ulrike von Luxburg and Bernhard Schölkopf: Statistical Learning Theory: Models, Concepts and Results