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Evidence, Inference and Enquiry
Edited by Philip Dawid, William Twining, and Mimi Vasilaki
504 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-726484-3
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Hardback
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01 December 2011
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- Underlines the importance of evidence to many topical debates
- Leads to a better understanding of the nature and interpretation of evidence
- Takes a cross-disciplinary approach
Evidence - its nature and interpretation - is the key to many topical debates and concerns such as global warming, evolution, the search for weapons of mass destruction, DNA profiling, evidence-based medicine. In 2004 University College London launched a cross-disciplinary research programme "Evidence, Inference and Enquiry" to explore the question: "Can there be an integrated multidisciplinary science of evidence?" While this question was hotly contested and no clear final consensus emerged, much was learned on the journey. This book, based on the closing conference of the programme held at the British Academy in December 2007, illustrates the complexity of the subject, with 17
chapters written from a diversity of perspectives including Archaeology, Computer Science, Economics, Education, Health, History, Law, Psychology, Philosophy and Statistics. General issues covered include principles and systems for handling complex evidence, evidence for policy-making, and human evidence-processing, as well as the very possibility of systematising the study of evidence.Readership: Scholars concerned with the nature of evidence in philosophy, law, medicine, and statistics; also readers interested in any empirically based discipline
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Edited by Philip Dawid, Professor of Statistics, University of Cambridge, William Twining, Quain Professor of Jurisprudence Emeritus, University College London, and Mimi Vasilaki Contributors: Philip Dawid, University of Cambridge David Schum, George Mason University, USA Jason Davies, University College London William Twining, University College London Amanda Hepler, George Mason University, USA David Schum, George Mason University, USA John Fox, Biomedical Engineering, University of Oxford David Lagnado, University College London Jill Russell, University College London Trisha Greenhalgh, Queen's Mary University London Terence Anderson, Law, University of Miami, USA Peter Tillers,, Cardozo School of Law, New York Nancy Cartwright, London School of Economics and Political Science Jacob Stegenga, University of California, USA Hasok Chang, University of Cambridge Grant Fisher, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology Alison Wylie, University of Washington USA David Colquhoun, University College London Jason Davies, University College London Mike Joffe, Imperial College London Tony Gardner-Medwin, University College London
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"I recommend reading the entire collection." - Sharon Crasnow, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
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Sir Geoffrey Allen: Foreword
1: Philip Dawid: Introduction
2: David Schum: Classifying Forms and Combinations of Evidence: Necessary in a Science of Evidence
3: Jason Davies: Disciplining the Disciplines
4: William Twining: Moving Beyond Law: Interdisciplinarity and the Study of Evidence
5: Philip Dawid; Amanda Hepler; David Schum: Inference Networks: Bayes and Wigmore
6: John Fox: Arguing about the Evidence: A Logical Approach
7: David Lagnado: Thinking about Evidence
8: Jill Russell and Trisha Greenhalgh: Rhetoric and Argumentation in Evidence-Based Policy Making
9: Terence Anderson: Generalisations and Evidential Reasoning
10: Peter Tillers: Of Inference Networks and Onto-Epistemology
11: Nancy Cartwright and Jacob Stegenga: A Theory of Evidence for Evidence-Based Policy
12: Hasok Chang and Grant Fisher: What the Ravens Really Teach Us: The Intrinsic Contextuality of Evidence
13: Alison Wylie: Critical Distance: Stabilizing Evidential Claims in Archaeology
14: David Colquhoun: In Praise of Randomisation
15: Jason Davies: Believing the Evidence
16: Mike Joffe: What Would a Scientific Economics Look Like?
17: Tony Gardner-Medwin: Reasonable Doubt: Uncertainty in Education, Science and Law
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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