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Henry E. Kyburg, Jr.

 

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Henry E. Kyburg, Jr.



 
 
Henry E. Kyburg, Jr. (1928 – 2007) was Gideon Burbank Professor of Moral Philosophy and Professor of Computer Science at the University of Rochester
University of Rochester

The University of Rochester is a private university, nonsectarian, research university located in Rochester, New York. The university grants undergraduate, graduate, doctoral, and professional degrees through six schools and various interdisciplinary programs....
, New York, and Pace Eminent Scholar at The Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, Pensacola, Florida. His first faculty posts were at Rockefeller Institute, University of Denver
University of Denver

The University of Denver , founded in 1864 is the oldest private university university in the Rocky Mountain Region of the United States. The University of Denver is a coeducational, four-year university in Denver, Colorado, Colorado....
, Wesleyan College
Wesleyan College

Wesleyan College is a private, Liberal arts colleges in the United States Women's Colleges in the Southern United States located in Macon, Georgia....
, and Wayne State University
Wayne State University

Wayne State University is located in Detroit, Michigan, in the city's Midtown, Detroit#Midtown Cultural Center, Detroit and is a 4th tier national university comprised of 12 schools and colleges offering more than 350 major subject areas to 33,000 graduate and undergraduate students....
.

Kyburg worked in probability and logic, and is known for his Lottery Paradox
Lottery paradox

Henry E. Kyburg, Jr.'s Lottery Paradox arises from considering a fair 1000 ticket lottery that has exactly one winning ticket. If this much is known about the execution of the lottery it is therefore rational to accept that some ticket will win....
 (1961). Kyburg also edited Studies in Subjective Probability (1964) with Howard Smokler.






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Henry E. Kyburg, Jr. (1928 – 2007) was Gideon Burbank Professor of Moral Philosophy and Professor of Computer Science at the University of Rochester
University of Rochester

The University of Rochester is a private university, nonsectarian, research university located in Rochester, New York. The university grants undergraduate, graduate, doctoral, and professional degrees through six schools and various interdisciplinary programs....
, New York, and Pace Eminent Scholar at The Institute for Human and Machine Cognition, Pensacola, Florida. His first faculty posts were at Rockefeller Institute, University of Denver
University of Denver

The University of Denver , founded in 1864 is the oldest private university university in the Rocky Mountain Region of the United States. The University of Denver is a coeducational, four-year university in Denver, Colorado, Colorado....
, Wesleyan College
Wesleyan College

Wesleyan College is a private, Liberal arts colleges in the United States Women's Colleges in the Southern United States located in Macon, Georgia....
, and Wayne State University
Wayne State University

Wayne State University is located in Detroit, Michigan, in the city's Midtown, Detroit#Midtown Cultural Center, Detroit and is a 4th tier national university comprised of 12 schools and colleges offering more than 350 major subject areas to 33,000 graduate and undergraduate students....
.

Kyburg worked in probability and logic, and is known for his Lottery Paradox
Lottery paradox

Henry E. Kyburg, Jr.'s Lottery Paradox arises from considering a fair 1000 ticket lottery that has exactly one winning ticket. If this much is known about the execution of the lottery it is therefore rational to accept that some ticket will win....
 (1961). Kyburg also edited Studies in Subjective Probability (1964) with Howard Smokler. Because of this collection's relation to Bayesian probability
Bayesian probability

Bayesian probability interprets the concept of probability as 'a measure of a state of knowledge' , and not as a frequentist . Broadly speaking, there are two views on Bayesian probability that interpret the 'state of knowledge' concept in different ways....
, Kyburg is often misunderstood to be a Bayesian. His own theory of probability is outlined in Logical Foundations of Statistical Inference (1974), a theory that first found form in his 1961 book Probability and the Logic of Rational Belief (in turn, a work closely related to his doctoral thesis). Kyburg describes his theory as Keynesian and Fisherian (see John Maynard Keynes and Ronald Fisher
Ronald Fisher

Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher, Fellow of the Royal Society was an England statistician, evolutionary biologist, and genetics. He was described by Anders Hald as "a genius who almost single-handedly created the foundations for modern statistical science" and Richard Dawkins described him as "the greatest of Charles Darwin successors"....
), a delivery on the promises of Rudolph Carnap and Hans Reichenbach
Hans Reichenbach

Hans Reichenbach was a leading Philosophy of science, educator and proponent of logical positivism. Reichenbach is best known for founding the Berlin Circle , and as the author of The Rise of Scientific Philosophy....
 for a logical probability based on reference classes, a reaction to Neyman-Pearson statistics (see Jerzy Neyman
Jerzy Neyman

Jerzy Neyman , born Jerzy Splawa-Neyman, was a Polish-American mathematician and statistician.He was born into a Poles family in Bendery, Bessarabia in Imperial Russia, the fourth of four children of Czeslaw Splawa-Neyman and Kazimiera Lutoslawska....
 and Karl Pearson
Karl Pearson

Karl Pearson Fellow of the Royal Society established the disciplineof mathematical statistics.In 1911 he founded the world's first university statistics department at University College London....
), and neutral with respect to Bayesian confirmational conditionalization. On the latter subject, Kyburg had extended discussion in the literature with lifelong friend and colleague Isaac Levi
Isaac Levi

Isaac Levi is the John Dewey Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Columbia University. Levi came onto the philosophic scene with his groundbreaking first book, Gambling with Truth....
.

Kyburg's later major works include Epistemology and Inference (1983), a collection of essays; Theory and Measurement (1984), a response to Krantz-Luce-Suppes-Tversky's Foundations of Measurement; and Science and Reason (1990), which seeks to respond to Karl Popper
Karl Popper

Knight Bachelor Karl Raimund Popper Order of the Companions of Honour, Fellow of the Royal Society, Fellow of the British Academy was an Austrian and British philosopher and a professor at the London School of Economics....
's and Bruno de Finetti
Bruno de Finetti

Bruno de Finetti was an Italy list of probabilists and statistician, noted for the "operational subjective" conception of probability. The classic exposition of his distinctive theory is the 1937 "La pr?vision: ses lois logiques, ses sources subjectives," which discussed probability founded on the coherence of betting odds and the consequenc...
's concerns that empirical data could not confirm a universally quantified scientific axiom (e.g., F = ma).

Kyburg was Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science
American Association for the Advancement of Science

The American Association for the Advancement of Science is an international non-profit organization with the stated goals of promoting cooperation between scientists, defending scientific freedom, encouraging scientific responsibility, and supporting science education and science outreach for the betterment of all humanity....
 (1982), Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Science (1995), Fellow of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence
American Association for Artificial Intelligence

The Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence or AAAI is an international, nonprofit, scientific society devoted to advancing the scientific understanding of the mechanisms underlying thought and intelligent behavior and their embodiment in machines....
 (2002), and recipient of the Butler Medal for Philosophy in Silver from Columbia University
Columbia University

Columbia University in the City of New York , is a private university in the United States and a member of the Ivy League. Columbia's main campus lies in the Morningside Heights, Manhattan neighborhood in the borough of Manhattan, in New York City....
, where he received his PhD with Ernest Nagel
Ernest Nagel

Ernest Nagel was among the most important philosophy of science of his time.Nagel was born in the New Town, Prague suburb of Prague and emigrated to the United States at the age of 10 with his family....
 as his advisor. Kyburg was also a graduate of Yale University
Yale University

Yale University is a private university in New Haven, Connecticut. Founded in 1701 as the Collegiate School, Yale is the Colonial Colleges institution of higher education in the United States and is a member of the Ivy League....
 and a 1980 Guggenheim Fellow.

Kyburg owned a farm in Lyons, New York
Lyons, New York

Lyons, New York may refer to either of two places in Wayne County, New York, USA:* Lyons , New York* Lyons , New York...
 where he raised Angus
Angus

Angus is one of the 32 Local government in Scotland council areas of Scotland, and a Lieutenancy areas of Scotland. The council area borders onto Aberdeenshire, Perth and Kinross and the Dundee City....
 cattle with his wife, Sarah, and promoted wind turbine
Wind turbine

A wind turbine is a rotating machine which converts the kinetic energy in wind into mechanical energy. If the mechanical energy is used directly by machinery, such as a pump or grinding stones, the machine is usually called a windmill....
 systems for energy-independent farmers.

Philosophical Relatives

Several full professors of philosophy today were once undergraduates of Henry Kyburg, including Daniel Dennett
Daniel Dennett

Daniel Clement Dennett is a prominent United States Philosophy whose research centers on philosophy of mind, philosophy of science and philosophy of biology, particularly as those fields relate to evolutionary biology and cognitive science....
, Robert Stalnaker
Robert Stalnaker

Robert Culp Stalnaker is Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 2007, he delivered the John Locke Lectures at Oxford University on the topic of Our Knowledge of the Internal World....
, Rich Thomason, and Teddy Seidenfeld. Kyburg's own line of philosophical descent was: Gottfried Leibniz
Gottfried Leibniz

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was a Germany polymath who wrote primarily in Latin and French language.He occupies an equally grand place in both the history of philosophy and the history of mathematics....
 >> Christian_Wolff_(philosopher)
Christian Wolff (philosopher)

Christian Wolff , baron, was a Germany philosopher....
 >> >> Immanuel Kant
Immanuel Kant

Immanuel Kant was an 18th-century German Philosophy from the Kingdom of Prussia city of K?nigsberg . He is regarded as one of the most influential thinkers of modern Europe and of the late Age of Enlightenment....
 >> Karl Leonhard Reinhold
Karl Leonhard Reinhold

Karl Leonhard Reinhold was an Austrian philosophy. He was the father of Ernst Christian Gottlieb Reinhold, also a philosopher....
 >> Friedrich Adolf Trendelenburg
Friedrich Adolf Trendelenburg

Friedrich Adolf Trendelenburg was a German philosopher and philologist....
 >> George Sylvester Morris
George Sylvester Morris

George Sylvester Morris was an United States educator and philosophical writer, born at Norwich, Vermont, the son of a well known abolitionist and temperance man....
 >> Josiah Royce
Josiah Royce

Josiah Royce was an American objective idealism philosopher....
 / William James / Charles Peirce
Charles Peirce

Charles Sanders Peirce was an American logician, mathematics, Philosophy, and science, born in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Peirce was educated as a chemist and employed as a scientist for 30 years....
 >> Morris Cohen
Morris Cohen

Morris Cohen may refer to:*Morris Cohen , "Morris "Two-Gun" Cohen". British-born adventurer who became a bodyguard for Sun Yat-sen*Morris Cohen , American Institute Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology...
 >> Ernest Nagel
Ernest Nagel

Ernest Nagel was among the most important philosophy of science of his time.Nagel was born in the New Town, Prague suburb of Prague and emigrated to the United States at the age of 10 with his family....
 >> Henry Kyburg.

His AI dissertation students were Ronald Loui
Ronald Loui

Ronald Prescott Loui is an American computer scientist and philosopher. He got his B.A. from Harvard in 1982 and his Ph.D. in Computer Science and Philosophy from the University of Rochester in 1987....
, Bulent Murtezaoglu, and Choh Man Teng, and postdoctoral visitor Fahiem Bacchus. His philosophy students included daughter Alice Kyburg, Mariam Thalos, Gregory Wheeler
Gregory Wheeler

Gregory Wheeler is an American logician, philosopher, computer scientist, and senior research scientist in Artificial Intelligence at the Center for Artificial Intelligence Research at the New University of Lisbon, Portugal, specializing in formal epistemology....
, William Harper, in addition to those listed above.

Theory of Probability

Several ideas distinguish Kyburg's Kyburgian or epistemological interpretation of probability:
  • Probability is measured by an interval (some mistake this as an affinity to Dempster-Shafer theory, but Kyburg firmly rejects their rule of combination; his work remained closer to confidence intervals, and was often interpreted by Bayesians as a commitment to a set of distributions, which Kyburg did not repudiate)
  • All probability statements can be traced to direct inference of frequency in a reference class (there can be Bayes-rule calculations upon direct-inference conclusions, but there is nothing like a prior distribution in Kyburg's theory)
  • The reference class is the most specific class with suitable frequency knowledge (this is the Reichenbach rule, which Kyburg made precise; his framework was later reinterpreted as a defeasible reasoning
    Defeasible reasoning

    Defeasible reasoning ia a kind of reasoning that is based on reasons that are defeasible, as opposed to the indefeasible reasons of deductive logic....
     system by John L. Pollock, but Kyburg never intended the calculation of objective probabilities to be shortcut by bounded rationality
    Bounded rationality

    Some models of human behavior in the social sciences assume that humans can be reasonably approximated or described as "rationality" entities . Many economics models assume that people are on average rational, and can in large enough quantities be approximated to act according to their preferences....
     due to computational imperfection)
  • All probability inferences are based on knowledge of frequencies and properties, not ignorance of frequencies; however, randomness is essentially the lack of knowledge of bias (Kyburg especially rejects the maximum entropist methods of Harold Jeffreys
    Harold Jeffreys

    Sir Harold Jeffreys, Fellow of the Royal Society was a mathematician, statistician, geophysicist, and astronomer.He was born in Fatfield, County Durham, England....
    , E.T. Jaynes and other uses of the Principle of Indifference
    Principle of indifference

    The principle of indifference is a rule for assigning epistemic probability.Suppose that there are n > 1 mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive possibilities....
     here; and Kyburg disagrees here with Isaac Levi
    Isaac Levi

    Isaac Levi is the John Dewey Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Columbia University. Levi came onto the philosophic scene with his groundbreaking first book, Gambling with Truth....
     who believes that chance must be positively asserted upon knowledge of relevant physical symmetries)
  • There is no disagreement over the probability once there is agreement on the relevant knowledge; this is an objectivism relativized to an evidential state (i.e., relativized to a set of observed frequencies of properties in a class, and a set of asserted properties of events)


Example: Suppose a corpus of Knowledge at a level of acceptance. Contained in this corpus are statements, e is a T1 and e is a T2. The observed frequency of P among T1 is .9. The observed frequency of P among T2 is .4. What is the probability that e is a P? Here, there are two conflicting reference classes, so the probability is either [0, 1], or some interval combining the .4 and .9, which sometimes is just [.4, .9] (but often a different conclusion will be warranted). Adding the knowledge All T1's are T2's now makes T1 the most specific relevant reference class and a dominator of all interfering reference classes. With this universal statement of class inclusion, the probability is .9, by direct inference from T1. Kyburg's rules apply to conflict and subsumption in complicated partial orders.

Theory of Acceptance, Confirmation, Measurement, and Scientific Method

Kyburg's inferences are always relativized to a level of acceptance that defines a corpus of morally certain statements. This is like a level of confidence, except that Neyman-Pearson theory is prohibited from retrospective calculation and post-observational acceptance, while Kyburg's epistemological interpretation of probability licenses both. At a level of acceptance, any statement that is more probable than the level of acceptance can be adopted as if it were a certainty. This can create logical inconsistency, which led Kyburg to the lottery paradox
Lottery paradox

Henry E. Kyburg, Jr.'s Lottery Paradox arises from considering a fair 1000 ticket lottery that has exactly one winning ticket. If this much is known about the execution of the lottery it is therefore rational to accept that some ticket will win....
 and which is solved by seeking unanimity among maximal consistent subsets of a corpus.

In the example above, the calculation that e is a P with probability .9 permits the acceptance of the statement e is a P categorically, at any level of acceptance lower than .9 (assuming also that the calculation was performed at an acceptance level above .9). The interesting tension is that very high levels of acceptance contain few evidentiary statements. They do not even include raw observations of the senses if those senses have often been fooled in the past. Similarly, if a measurement device reports within an interval of error at a rate of .95, then no measurable statements are acceptable at a level above .95, unless the interval of error is widened. Meanwhile, at lower levels of acceptance, so many contradictory statements are acceptable that nothing useful can be derived in all maximal consistent subsets.

Kyburg's treatment of universally quantified sentences is to add them to the Ur-corpus or meaning postulate
Meaning postulate

In semantics, a meaning postulate is the notion that lexical items can be defined in terms of relations with other lexical items. The classic example is: bachelor = unmarried male....
s
of the language. There, a statement like F = ma or preference is transitive provides additional inferences at all acceptance levels. In some cases, the addition of an axiom produces predictions that are not refuted by experience. These are the adoptable theoretical postulates (and they must still be ordered by some kind of simplicity). In other cases, the theoretical postulate is in conflict with the evidence and measurement-based observations, so the postulate must be rejected. In this way, Kyburg provides a probability-mediated model of predictive power
Predictive power

The predictive power of a scientific theory refers to its ability to generate testability predictions. Theories with strong predictive power are highly valued, because the predictions can often encourage the falsifiability of the theory....
, scientific theory-formation, the Web of Belief, and linguistic variation. The theory of acceptance mediates the tension between linguistic categorical assertion and probability-based epistemology.