On What We Know About Chance | Semantic Scholar Skip to search formSkip to main content> Semantic Scholar's Logo Search Sign InCreate Free Account You are currently offline. Some features of the site may not work correctly. DOI:10.1093/bjps/54.2.171 Corpus ID: 10575085On What We Know About Chance @article{Arntzenius2003OnWW, title={On What We Know About Chance}, author={Frank Arntzenius and Ned Hall}, journal={The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science}, year={2003}, volume={54}, pages={171 - 179} } Frank Arntzenius, Ned Hall Published 2003 Philosophy The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science The ‘Principal Principle’ states, roughly, that one's subjective probability for a proposition should conform to one's beliefs about that proposition's objective chance of coming true. David Lewis has argued (i) that this principle provides the defining role for chance; (ii) that it conflicts with his reductionist thesis of Humean supervenience, and so must be replaced by an amended version that avoids the conflict; hence (iii) that nothing perfectly deserves the name ‘chance’, although… Expand View on U of Chicago Save to Library Create Alert Cite Launch Research Feed Share This Paper 44 CitationsHighly Influential Citations 2 Background Citations 12 Methods Citations 1 View All 44 Citations Citation Type Citation Type All Types Cites Results Cites Methods Cites Background Has PDF Publication Type Author More Filters More Filters Filters Sort by Relevance Sort by Most Influenced Papers Sort by Citation Count Sort by Recency Chance without Credence J. Roberts Economics The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 2013 1 Save Alert Research Feed Objective Chance A Study in the Lewisian Tradition George Masterton Psychology 2010 Highly Influenced PDF View 10 excerpts, cites background Save Alert Research Feed On background: using two-argument chance Kevin Nelson Mathematics, Computer Science Synthese 2007 10 View 2 excerpts, cites background Save Alert Research Feed Best System Approaches to Chance W. Schwarz Philosophy 2016 2 PDF View 2 excerpts, cites background Save Alert Research Feed Principled Chances J. Schaffer The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 2003 14 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Chance and Context T. Handfield, A. Wilson Mathematics 2014 10 PDF View 1 excerpt, cites background Save Alert Research Feed Two Mistakes About Credence and Chance Ned Hall Philosophy 2004 88 View 2 excerpts, cites methods and background Save Alert Research Feed Did god know it? God’s relation to a world of chance and randomness B. P. Göcke Philosophy 2015 1 Save Alert Research Feed Varieties of Bayesianism J. Weisberg Computer Science Inductive Logic 2011 19 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Bayesian chance W. Harper, Sheldon J. Chow, Gemma G R Murray Computer Science Synthese 2011 2 Save Alert Research Feed ... 1 2 3 4 5 ... References SHOWING 1-5 OF 5 REFERENCES Correcting The Guide to Objective Chance Ned Hall Philosophy 1994 131 View 1 excerpt, references background Save Alert Research Feed Undermining and Admissibility M. Thau Philosophy 1994 71 Save Alert Research Feed A Subjectivist’s Guide to Objective Chance D. Lewis Philosophy 1980 809 PDF Save Alert Research Feed Papers in metaphysics and epistemology: Humean Supervenience debugged D. Lewis Philosophy 1999 390 Save Alert Research Feed Humean Supervenience Debugged 1994 Related Papers Abstract 44 Citations 5 References Related Papers Stay Connected With Semantic Scholar Sign Up About Semantic Scholar Semantic Scholar is a free, AI-powered research tool for scientific literature, based at the Allen Institute for AI. Learn More → Resources DatasetsSupp.aiAPIOpen Corpus Organization About UsResearchPublishing PartnersData Partners   FAQContact Proudly built by AI2 with the help of our Collaborators Terms of Service•Privacy Policy The Allen Institute for AI By clicking accept or continuing to use the site, you agree to the terms outlined in our Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, and Dataset License ACCEPT & CONTINUE