ABSTRACT

How do we go about weighing evidence, testing hypotheses, and making inferences? According to the model of Inference to the Best Explanation, we work out what to infer from the evidence by thinking about what would actually explain that evidence, and we take the ability of a hypothesis to explain the evidence as a sign that the hypothesis is correct. In Inference to the Best Explanation, Peter Lipton gives this important and influential idea the development and assessment it deserves.

The second edition has been substantially enlarged and reworked, with a new chapter on the relationship between explanation and Bayesianism, and an extension and defence of the account of contrastive explanation. It also includes an expanded defence of the claims that our inferences really are guided by diverse explanatory considerations, and that this pattern of inference can take us towards the truth. This edition of Inference to the Best Explanation has also been updated throughout and includes a new bibliography.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|16 pages

Induction

chapter Chapter 2|9 pages

Explanation

chapter Chapter 3|25 pages

The causal model

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

Inference to the Best Explanation

chapter Chapter 5|20 pages

Contrastive inference

chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

The raven paradox

chapter Chapter 7|18 pages

Bayesian abduction

chapter Chapter 8|21 pages

Explanation as a guide to inference

chapter Chapter 9|22 pages

Loveliness and truth

chapter Chapter 10|20 pages

Prediction and prejudice

chapter Chapter 11|23 pages

Truth and explanation

chapter |4 pages

Conclusion