The Debate on Probable Opinions in the Scholastic Tradition: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, cartea 302
Autor Rudolf Schuessleren Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 apr 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004370241
ISBN-10: 9004370242
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.86 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Studies in Intellectual History
ISBN-10: 9004370242
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.86 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Studies in Intellectual History
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Innovations in the Early Modern Era
2 Plurality and Pluralism
3 Modern Approaches to the ‘Use of Opinions’: Social Epistemology, Testimony, and Others
4 Sources, Genres, and Interpretations
5 Chapter Preview
1 Medieval Antecedents
1 Medieval Scholastic Attitudes to the Variety of Opinions
2 Knowledge, Faith/Conviction (fides), and Opinion in the Middle Ages
3 Probability as Standard for the Acceptability of Opinions
4 ‘Medieval Tutiorism’
5 A Medieval Pluralism of Opinions
6 Conclusion
2 The Road to Probabilism—A New Doctrine on the Use of Opinions
1 From the Late Fifteenth to the Late Sixteenth Century
2 Probabilism
3 Discussion and Conclusion
3 Probabilism and Anti-probabilism—Interlocked Lifecycles
1 1577–1620: the Rise of Probabilism
2 1620–1656: Probabilism as Dominant Mainstream
3 1656–1700: Probabilism Under Fire. The Rise of Anti-Probabilism. Probabilism’s Defenses. The Epistemological Debate Unfolds
4 1700–1773: More Debate, New Developments, and the Geography of Persistence
5 1773–Present: Living On in Catholic Moral Theology
4 The New Dual Notion of Probability and the Demise of the Endoxon
1 The New Dual Concept of Probability
2 Maryks’ Claim of the Jesuit Origins of Dual Probability
3 Ciceronian Influences?
4 The Heyday of the (Unrefined) Dual Concept of Probability
5 Intrinsic and Extrinsic Probability
6 Leaving Aristotle without Saying Goodbye
7 Conclusion
5 Selection Criteria, Common Opinion, and Ordinary Persons
1 Selection Criteria for Authors and Opinions
2 Sets of Criteria from the Seventeenth Century
3 Common Opinion
4 Ordinary Persons and Non-Experts (Illiterati, Idiotae)
5 Conclusion
6 Stand-Alone Authority and Majorities as Guide to Truth
1 Aquinas on Following One’s Teacher
2 Stand-Alone Authority in Probabilism
3 Anti-probabilism: Opponents of Stand-Alone Authority 4 Numerical Thresholds of Extrinsic Probability
5 The Early Modern Philosophical Avant-Garde on Stand-Alone Authority
6 Epistemic Majoritarianism: Scholastic and Modern
7 Conclusion
7 Ancient and Modern Opinions—Which to Prefer?
1 Antiqui and Moderni in Scholastic Thought
2 Probabilism as Vector of Modernization
3 Caramuel and the Moderns
4 Anti-probabilist Backlash
5 The querelle des anciens et des modernes: Parallels and Influence
6 Conclusion
8 The Great Debate on Probable Opinions (1656–1700)
1 New Conceptions of Probable Opinion and Probability
2 Kinds of Probability
3 Key Assumptions of Anti-probabilism
4 Conclusion
9 Delimiting the Space of the Reasonable—The Challenge of Probable Probability and Slight Probability
1 The Debate on Slight and Probable Probability
2 An Argument of Infinite Regress
3 The Spectre of Skepticism
4 Caramuel and Probable Probability
5 Conclusion
10 Believing What We Want—A New Doxastic Voluntarism
1 Scholastic Doxastic Voluntarism before the Seventeenth Century
2 Probabilist Doxastic Voluntarism after Bianchi
3 Mature Probabilist Doxastic Voluntarism: Anthony Terill’s Approach
4 Terill Further Considered
5 Conclusion
11 Assessing Probabilism—Between Liberty and Tutelage
1 Modern Views on Probabilism: Liberty, Tutelage, Extrinsicism
2 The Perspective of Normative Theory
3 The Perspective of Practice and the Historical Perspective
4 Conclusion
12 The Scholastic Background of Modern Probability
1 Gambling Problems and Interpretations of Probability
2 Caramuel’s Contribution
3 A New Scholastic Frequentism
4 Scholastics on Aleatory Contracts and Expected Value
5 Other Developments
6 Why Did a Mathematical Theory of Probability Emerge in the Middle of the Seventeenth Century?
References
Index
Introduction
1 Innovations in the Early Modern Era
2 Plurality and Pluralism
3 Modern Approaches to the ‘Use of Opinions’: Social Epistemology, Testimony, and Others
4 Sources, Genres, and Interpretations
5 Chapter Preview
1 Medieval Antecedents
1 Medieval Scholastic Attitudes to the Variety of Opinions
2 Knowledge, Faith/Conviction (fides), and Opinion in the Middle Ages
3 Probability as Standard for the Acceptability of Opinions
4 ‘Medieval Tutiorism’
5 A Medieval Pluralism of Opinions
6 Conclusion
2 The Road to Probabilism—A New Doctrine on the Use of Opinions
1 From the Late Fifteenth to the Late Sixteenth Century
2 Probabilism
3 Discussion and Conclusion
3 Probabilism and Anti-probabilism—Interlocked Lifecycles
1 1577–1620: the Rise of Probabilism
2 1620–1656: Probabilism as Dominant Mainstream
3 1656–1700: Probabilism Under Fire. The Rise of Anti-Probabilism. Probabilism’s Defenses. The Epistemological Debate Unfolds
4 1700–1773: More Debate, New Developments, and the Geography of Persistence
5 1773–Present: Living On in Catholic Moral Theology
4 The New Dual Notion of Probability and the Demise of the Endoxon
1 The New Dual Concept of Probability
2 Maryks’ Claim of the Jesuit Origins of Dual Probability
3 Ciceronian Influences?
4 The Heyday of the (Unrefined) Dual Concept of Probability
5 Intrinsic and Extrinsic Probability
6 Leaving Aristotle without Saying Goodbye
7 Conclusion
5 Selection Criteria, Common Opinion, and Ordinary Persons
1 Selection Criteria for Authors and Opinions
2 Sets of Criteria from the Seventeenth Century
3 Common Opinion
4 Ordinary Persons and Non-Experts (Illiterati, Idiotae)
5 Conclusion
6 Stand-Alone Authority and Majorities as Guide to Truth
1 Aquinas on Following One’s Teacher
2 Stand-Alone Authority in Probabilism
3 Anti-probabilism: Opponents of Stand-Alone Authority 4 Numerical Thresholds of Extrinsic Probability
5 The Early Modern Philosophical Avant-Garde on Stand-Alone Authority
6 Epistemic Majoritarianism: Scholastic and Modern
7 Conclusion
7 Ancient and Modern Opinions—Which to Prefer?
1 Antiqui and Moderni in Scholastic Thought
2 Probabilism as Vector of Modernization
3 Caramuel and the Moderns
4 Anti-probabilist Backlash
5 The querelle des anciens et des modernes: Parallels and Influence
6 Conclusion
8 The Great Debate on Probable Opinions (1656–1700)
1 New Conceptions of Probable Opinion and Probability
2 Kinds of Probability
3 Key Assumptions of Anti-probabilism
4 Conclusion
9 Delimiting the Space of the Reasonable—The Challenge of Probable Probability and Slight Probability
1 The Debate on Slight and Probable Probability
2 An Argument of Infinite Regress
3 The Spectre of Skepticism
4 Caramuel and Probable Probability
5 Conclusion
10 Believing What We Want—A New Doxastic Voluntarism
1 Scholastic Doxastic Voluntarism before the Seventeenth Century
2 Probabilist Doxastic Voluntarism after Bianchi
3 Mature Probabilist Doxastic Voluntarism: Anthony Terill’s Approach
4 Terill Further Considered
5 Conclusion
11 Assessing Probabilism—Between Liberty and Tutelage
1 Modern Views on Probabilism: Liberty, Tutelage, Extrinsicism
2 The Perspective of Normative Theory
3 The Perspective of Practice and the Historical Perspective
4 Conclusion
12 The Scholastic Background of Modern Probability
1 Gambling Problems and Interpretations of Probability
2 Caramuel’s Contribution
3 A New Scholastic Frequentism
4 Scholastics on Aleatory Contracts and Expected Value
5 Other Developments
6 Why Did a Mathematical Theory of Probability Emerge in the Middle of the Seventeenth Century?
References
Index
Notă biografică
Rudolf Schuessler is professor of philosophy at the University of Bayreuth, Germany. His areas of specialization include scholastic approaches to disagreement, moral uncertainty, and probability, as well as modern practical ethics and theories of justice.