Overview
- Comprehensive overview of the application of Baysian argumentation in philosophy, linguistics and social psychology
- Includes analyses of real life court cases, results of experimental research, and insights obtained from computer models
- Provides a dialectical and a dynamic perspective to argumentation and treats the natural language argument ?
Part of the book series: Synthese Library (SYLI, volume 362)
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About this book
Relevant to, and drawing from, a range of disciplines, the chapters in this collection show the diversity, and applicability, of research in Bayesian argumentation. Together, they form a challenge to philosophers versed in both the use and criticism of Bayesian models who have largely overlooked their potential in argumentation. Selected from contributions to a multidisciplinary workshop on the topic held in Sweden in 2010, the authors count linguists and social psychologists among their number, in addition to philosophers. They analyze material that includes real-life court cases, experimental research results, and the insights gained from computer models.
The volume provides, for the first time, a formal measure of subjective argument strength and argument force, robust enough to allow advocates of opposing sides of an argument to agree on the relative strengths of their supporting reasoning. With papers from leading figures such as Michael Oaksford and Ulrike Hahn, the book comprises recent research conducted at the frontiers of Bayesian argumentation and provides a multitude of examples in which these formal tools can be applied to informal argument. It signals new and impending developments in philosophy, which has seen Bayesian models deployed in formal epistemology and philosophy of science, but has yet to explore the full potential of Bayesian models as a framework in argumentation. In doing so, this revealing anthology looks destined to become a standard teaching text in years to come.
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Keywords
- Ad Hominem Argument Bayesian
- Ad verecundiam
- Agent Based Modeling
- Argument Force
- Argument Strength
- Argument against the man
- Argument from authority
- Bayesian Group Psychology
- Bayesian Legal
- Bayesian Probability Calculus
- Bayesian Simulation Model
- Begging the Question
- Bounded Rationality
- Case Study Bayesian
- Coherence measures
- Content Source
- Degrees of Justification
- Dialectial Structure
- Dialectical Map
- Evidential Probability
- Evidential certainty
- Fallacies
- Formal Dialectics
- Game theory
- Laputa Computer Similation
- Measures of support
- Message Content
- Natural Language Argumentation
- Persuasive Argument Theory
- Petitio Principii
- Pragma-dialectics
- Preface Paradox
- Probability Legal Argumentation
- Stake Size
- Statistical Inference
- Testimony Bayesian Argumentation
- Veristic value
Table of contents (11 chapters)
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The Bayesian Approach to Argumentation
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Modeling Rational Agents
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Theoretical Issues
Editors and Affiliations
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Bayesian Argumentation
Book Subtitle: The practical side of probability
Editors: Frank Zenker
Series Title: Synthese Library
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-5357-0
Publisher: Springer Dordrecht
eBook Packages: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, Philosophy and Religion (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013
Hardcover ISBN: 978-94-007-5356-3Published: 08 December 2012
Softcover ISBN: 978-94-007-9329-3Published: 29 January 2015
eBook ISBN: 978-94-007-5357-0Published: 09 December 2012
Series ISSN: 0166-6991
Series E-ISSN: 2542-8292
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: VIII, 216
Topics: Epistemology, Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Methodology of the Social Sciences, Simulation and Modeling, Applied Linguistics