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Full Idea
Since inference is inference to the best total account, all your prior beliefs are relevant and your conclusion is everything you believe at the end. So, you constantly reaffirm your beliefs in inference.
Gist of Idea
You have to reaffirm all your beliefs when you make a logical inference
Source
Gilbert Harman (Thought [1973], 12.1)
Book Ref
Harman,Gilbert: 'Thought' [Princeton 1977], p.189
21801 | Unlike Descartes' atomism, Spinoza held a holistic view of belief [Spinoza, by Schmid] |
18969 | How do you distinguish three beliefs from four beliefs or two beliefs? [Quine] |
6397 | The concept of belief can only derive from relationship to a speech community [Davidson] |
8867 | A belief requires understanding the distinctions of true-and-false, and appearance-and-reality [Davidson] |
3491 | Beliefs are part of a network, and also exist against a background [Searle] |
3490 | Beliefs only make sense as part of a network of other beliefs [Searle] |
3100 | You have to reaffirm all your beliefs when you make a logical inference [Harman] |
2502 | How do you count beliefs? [Fodor] |
2735 | Could you have a single belief on its own? [Audi,R] |