Readership: Scholars and advanced students in philosophy of science, decision theory, and epistemology
Michael G. Titelbaum, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Michael G. Titelbaum grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. He completed a BA in philosophy at Harvard College, a PhD in philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, and a postdoc at the Australian National University. He is an Assistant Professor of philosophy at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
I: Going Modeling 1: Introduction 2: Models and Norms II Elements of CLF 3: The Modeling Framework and What Models Represent 4: Applying CLF Models to Stories 5: Three Common Objections to Bayesian Frameworks III Memory Loss 6: Generalized Conditionalization 7: Suppositional Consistency IV Context-Sensitivity 8: The Proper Expansion Principle 9: Applying (PEP) 10: Alternative Updating Schemes 11: Indifference Principles and Quantum Mechanics V Conclusion 12: A Few Loose Ends 13: The Advantages of Modeling