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  1. (1 other version)The probable and the provable.Laurence Jonathan Cohen - 1977 - Oxford: Clarendon Press.
    The book was planned and written as a single, sustained argument. But earlier versions of a few parts of it have appeared separately. The object of this book is both to establish the existence of the paradoxes, and also to describe a non-Pascalian concept of probability in terms of which one can analyse the structure of forensic proof without giving rise to such typical signs of theoretical misfit. Neither the complementational principle for negation nor the multiplicative principle for conjunction applies (...)
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  • Bayesianism versus baconianism in the evaluation of medical diagnoses.L. Jonathan Cohen - 1980 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 31 (1):45-62.
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  • The Probable and the Provable.Samuel Stoljar - 1981 - Philosophical Review 90 (3):457.
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  • Why a tale twice told is more likely to take hold.George N. Schlesinger - 1988 - Philosophical Studies 54 (1):141 - 152.
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  • The corroboration theorem: A reply to Falk.L. Jonathan Cohen - 1986 - Mind 95 (380):510-512.
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