Open Access
2010 Justification by Infinite Loops
David Atkinson, Jeanne Peijnenburg
Notre Dame J. Formal Logic 51(4): 407-416 (2010). DOI: 10.1215/00294527-2010-025

Abstract

In an earlier paper we have shown that a proposition can have a well-defined probability value, even if its justification consists of an infinite linear chain. In the present paper we demonstrate that the same holds if the justification takes the form of a closed loop. Moreover, in the limit that the size of the loop tends to infinity, the probability value of the justified proposition is always well-defined, whereas this is not always so for the infinite linear chain. This suggests that infinitism sits more comfortably with a coherentist view of justification than with an approach in which justification is portrayed as a linear process.

Citation

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David Atkinson. Jeanne Peijnenburg. "Justification by Infinite Loops." Notre Dame J. Formal Logic 51 (4) 407 - 416, 2010. https://doi.org/10.1215/00294527-2010-025

Information

Published: 2010
First available in Project Euclid: 29 September 2010

zbMATH: 1205.60011
MathSciNet: MR2741833
Digital Object Identifier: 10.1215/00294527-2010-025

Subjects:
Primary: 60A99

Keywords: coherentism , infinitism , probabilistic justification

Rights: Copyright © 2010 University of Notre Dame

Vol.51 • No. 4 • 2010
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