Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Routledge Revivals : Routledge Revivals - F. C. Benenson

Routledge Revivals

By: F. C. Benenson

29 August 2025 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

RRP $200.00

$176.75

12%OFF

or 4 interest-free payments of $44.19 with

 or 

Available for Backorder. We will order this from our supplier however there isn't a current ETA.

First published in 1984, in Probability, Objectivity and Evidence the author claims that the theory of probability provides a single, correct, analysis of probability and that the concept of probability employed in science can best be understood as that of inductive probability; to do so, it is necessary to show both how the logical relation theory of probability can be given a formulation sufficiently objective for the purposes of science, and how other attempts to explain the objective character of probability judgements are unsatisfactory.

These and related questions occupy the first five chapters of the book. The last two chapters contain more or less independent material on the principle of indifference. The author argues that in essence, the logical relation theory alone can explain how we have objective knowledge of probabilities, and so it alone provides a viable system translation of the concept of probability used in science. This is a must read for students of logic and philosophy.

More in Philosophy & Logic

Critical Thinking : The Basics - Stuart  Hanscomb
The Stoic Habit : How to Own Your Choices-Even When It's Difficult - Bob Robinson
Rationality : What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters - Steven Pinker
Critical Thinking Skills For Dummies : For Dummies - Martin Cohen
The Nature of Belief - Eric  Schwitzgebel

$300.75

Analogy and Exemplary Reasoning in Legal Discourse - Hendrik Kaptein
Philosophy of Language : A Contemporary Introduction - William G. Lycan
Logic For Dummies : For Dummies - Mark Zegarelli

RRP $41.95

$29.99

29%
OFF
Logic - Stan Baronett

Paperback

$371.75

Aristotle's Organon in Old and New Logic : 1800-1950 - Colin Guthrie  King
How to Win an Argument : An Ancient Guide to the Art of Persuasion - Marcus Tullius Cicero

This product is categorised by