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(1998) Synthese 117 (1).

Common sense and maximum entropy

Jeffrey Paris

pp. 75-93

This paper concerns the question of how to draw inferences common sensically from uncertain knowledge. Since the early work of Shore and Johnson (1980), Paris and Vencovská (1990), and Csiszár (1989), it has been known that the Maximum Entropy Inference Process is the only inference process which obeys certain common sense principles of uncertain reasoning. In this paper we consider the present status of this result and argue that within the rather narrow context in which we work this complete and consistent mode of uncertain reasoning is actually characterised by the observance of just a single common sense principle (or slogan).

Publication details

DOI: 10.1023/A:1005081609010

Full citation:

Paris, J. (1998). Common sense and maximum entropy. Synthese 117 (1), pp. 75-93.

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