...where can we look for a relevant kind of probability? Or is the idea of a probable belief just so much nonsense.... — PossibleAaran
It's useless to look for a tool if you don't know what the job is. Especially for a tool that does everything: that tool doesn't exist. Also, belief is almost always a sign that both certainty and probability are out the window — tim wood
Aristotle covered this (from Nicomachean Ethics, but I can't find the quote I'm looking for): it's a mistake to look for more clarity than a subject matter will allow. — tim wood
The "tool" I am looking for is one which distinguishes mere guess work from credible belief. A credible belief is one which is probably true, but in what sense of "probably"? We can talk of distinguishing speculation from credible theory if you don't like talk of belief. Can't we say anything more exact than "a credible theory is one which is probable. Probable in some sense or other, but not statistical and not subjective"? That's not particularly illuminating. — PossibleAaran
It is common to say that my belief is still credible even though not certain because it is "probable": — PossibleAaran
If I say a possible event has a high probability I mean I am very confident it will happen, and that I will not be at all surprised if it does happen, and fairly surprised if it doesn't. — andrewk
credibility boils down to another measure of confidence. — andrewk
The test is use, the criteria being, does it work? — tim wood
you might try defining your terms — tim wood
What does it mean that a belief is "credible?" Doesn't it mean there is justification for it? — T Clark
Aren't you just recapitulating Descartes? I think I probably am therefore I am. — T Clark
We can say that a belief is more credible - more worthy of our ascent - than another when there is justification for it, but what do you mean by "Justification"? You don't necessarily have to give a definition here, although you could do that. But you could instead illustrate the notion with some examples. That would be helpful. — PossibleAaran
I'm not making the cogito argument at all, and as far as I know, Descartes didn't write on probability. — PossibleAaran
Or is the idea of a probable belief just so much nonsense put forward in a desperate attempt to stave off scepticisim? — PossibleAaran
So something that's credible is "worthy of our ascent?" Does that mean "true?" "Probably true." This is getting a bit circular. — T Clark
Here's a definition of "justification" from the web - The action of showing something to be right or reasonable. In this context, justification is an answer to the question "How do you know that?" Example - I say "John stole the money." You say "How do you know that?" I say "He told me he did it." It doesn't mean it's definitely true, only that I have good reason to believe it. — T Clark
We are justified in holding a belief, or we are not. There is no percentage roll that makes a belief more or less justified. It simply is, or isn't. — Moliere
Alright, what do you mean by justified? — PossibleAaran
↪tim wood
The test is use, the criteria being, does it work?
— tim wood
Is the suggestion here that a credible theory is just one that is useful?
you might try defining your terms
— tim wood
Which terms do you want defined? I am trying to figure out whether it makes any sense to think of some beliefs as more credible than others. In what sense is any belief or theory ever more credible than another? — PossibleAaran
Trick for what, exactly? And, each - all - of the significant words in your post are trouble and ultimately themselves destructive of sense unless kept on a tight rein; i.e., well-defined.If neither of these species of probability will do the trick, where can we look for a relevant kind of probability? Or is the idea of a probable belief just so much nonsense put forward in a desperate attempt to stave off scepticisim? — PossibleAaran
To use 'credible' in the sense it is used in this quote is to use it in an absolute sense. I see credibility as relative to the person who gives or withholds credence. It is like beauty in that way. I can see no more hope of coming up with a workable notion of mind-independent credibility than of beauty. After all, 'credible' relates to belief, which has no meaning at all in the absence of a mind.Is this not quite a sceptical result? That no belief is more credible than any other except in the very weak sense that we believe some things and don't believe others? Perhaps you are happy with this. — PossibleAaran
You have identified two ways of probable belief. Statistical, which could be measured to some degree, and practical, which relies on facts -- were Plato and Aristotle both alive in the same era, for instance. If we are sincere about making and articulating a belief, we know that our beliefs must obey some form of reason. And note that I say some form of reason, because I don't necessarily mean epistemic. Your belief that Plato taught Aristotle must have been triggered by what you've read, heard, or learned from others. The same way your belief that you would die before the age of 90 was triggered by knowing some statistics on aging and men.Statistical probability is a proportion of some reference class. So if it is statistically probable that I die before age 90 this is because the proportion of men (suitably similar to me) who have died before age 90 is quite high. Perhaps 7/10 men suitably like me die before age 90. That is what it means to say something is statistically likely. But what sense does it make to say that my belief that Plato taught Aristotle is statistically likely to be true? Statistically likely given what reference class? — PossibleAaran
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