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A defense of objectivism about evidential support

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Brian Hedden*
Affiliation:
Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

Abstract

Objectivism about evidential support is the thesis that facts about the degree to which a body of evidence supports a hypothesis are objective rather than depending on subjective factors like one’s own language or epistemic values. Objectivism about evidential support is key to defending a synchronic, time-slice-centric conception of epistemic rationality, on which what you ought to believe at a time depends only on what evidence you have at that time, and not on how you were at previous times. Here, I defend a version of objectivism about evidential support on which facts about evidential support are grounded in facts about explanatoriness.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Journal of Philosophy 2015

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