Vagueness and uncertainty

<p>In this thesis I investigate the behaviour of uncertainty about vague matters. It is a fairly common view that vagueness involves uncertainty of <em>some</em> sort. However there are many fundamental questions about this kind of uncertainty that are left open, questions I shall...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bacon, A, Andrew Bacon
Other Authors: Dorr, C
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
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author Bacon, A
Andrew Bacon
author2 Dorr, C
author_facet Dorr, C
Bacon, A
Andrew Bacon
author_sort Bacon, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>In this thesis I investigate the behaviour of uncertainty about vague matters. It is a fairly common view that vagueness involves uncertainty of <em>some</em> sort. However there are many fundamental questions about this kind of uncertainty that are left open, questions I shall attempt to answer in this thesis. Could you be genuinely uncertain about p when there is no matter of fact whether p? Could you remain uncertain in a vague proposition, even if you knew exactly which possible world obtained? Should your degrees of belief be probabilistically coherent? Should your beliefs in the vague be fixed by your beliefs in the precise? Could one in principle tell what credences a person has in the vague?</p> <p>This thesis defends the view that typically one ought to be genuinely uncertain about matters one considers to be vague; uncertainty about vague matters is no different in this regard from uncertainty about the future, the deep sea or far away galaxies.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:423d36c5-d8db-4931-b33e-a06c29aecf552024-12-07T17:20:55ZVagueness and uncertaintyThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:423d36c5-d8db-4931-b33e-a06c29aecf55PhilosophyLogicEpistemologyEnglish2012Bacon, AAndrew BaconDorr, CWilliamson, T<p>In this thesis I investigate the behaviour of uncertainty about vague matters. It is a fairly common view that vagueness involves uncertainty of <em>some</em> sort. However there are many fundamental questions about this kind of uncertainty that are left open, questions I shall attempt to answer in this thesis. Could you be genuinely uncertain about p when there is no matter of fact whether p? Could you remain uncertain in a vague proposition, even if you knew exactly which possible world obtained? Should your degrees of belief be probabilistically coherent? Should your beliefs in the vague be fixed by your beliefs in the precise? Could one in principle tell what credences a person has in the vague?</p> <p>This thesis defends the view that typically one ought to be genuinely uncertain about matters one considers to be vague; uncertainty about vague matters is no different in this regard from uncertainty about the future, the deep sea or far away galaxies.</p>
spellingShingle Philosophy
Logic
Epistemology
Bacon, A
Andrew Bacon
Vagueness and uncertainty
title Vagueness and uncertainty
title_full Vagueness and uncertainty
title_fullStr Vagueness and uncertainty
title_full_unstemmed Vagueness and uncertainty
title_short Vagueness and uncertainty
title_sort vagueness and uncertainty
topic Philosophy
Logic
Epistemology
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