Back to required readings:
Many of the very helpful comments below are due to Mike Titelbaum
On Hempel and the Ravens:
On Grue
On Carnap and Logical Theories
On Bayesian Confirmation Measures
- Hajek and Joyce, "Confirmation". (This encyclopedia-style piece has some nice review of confirmation material we've been working through lately, plus a perspective on the rival-confirmation-measures debate different from what you'll get from Eells and Fitelson below.)
- Fitelson, Evidence of evidence is not (necessarily) evidence
- Fitelson, "The Plurality of Bayesian Confirmation Measures and the Problem of Measure Sensitivity". (Introduces the issue of how best to measure confirmation.)
- Eells and Fitelson, "Symmetries and Asymmetries in Evidential Support". (If you're only going to read one of these pieces on choosing a confirmation measure, I'd choose this one.)
- Crupi, Tentori, Gonazlez, "On Bayesian Measures of Evidential Support: Theoretical and Empirical Issues". (Proposes a new confirmation measure that hadn't been considered in the literature before, then conducts actual studies with subjects to elicit their judgments about what supports what and to what degree.)
- Roche and Shogenji, "Confirmation, Transitivity, and Moore: The Screening-Off Approach".