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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good Introduction to Inductive Logic, February 22, 2004
This book, in its 4th edition, was one of the first textbooks on inductive logic I read. Here is the table of contents:1. Basics of Logic 2. Probability and Inductive Logic 3. The Traditional Problem of Induction 4. The Goodman Paradox and the New Riddle of Induction 5. Mill's Methods of Experimental Inquiry and the Nature of Causality 6. The Probability Calculus 7. Kinds of Probability 8. Probability and Scientific Inductive Logic Answers to Selected Exercises Index I did not read this textbook as a textbook for a class, but instead read it independently. I also did all of the exercises in the entire book, and used the answers at the end of the book to verify my answers whenever possible. Overall, I was very pleased with the textbook. The explanations were mostly clear, and the progression of topics from the simple to complex was appropriate. I have two minor complaints about the book. The first regards chapter 7, where Skyrms discusses, among other topics, the chance function as well as the von Neumann-Morgenstern theory of utility. I don't know if this is a statement about the textbook or the reader, but I felt the explanations of those two topics were less clear than other sections of the book. I was able to compensate for that by doing Internet searches on those two topics, however, so it wasn't a major inconvenience. The second complaint regards the answers to exercises. As the other reviewer noted, the back of the book is incorrect when it states there are "completely worked out solutions at the back of the book for every other problem." Off the top of my head, I would say that is probably true 80-85% of the time, with most of the exceptions occurring towards the end of the book. This is unfortunate, since the most complex exercises are naturally found towards the end of the book. In particular, the exercise for section VII.6 (on chance) on p. 150 is enormously complicated, and cries out for an answer. There should have been a second exercise for that section, so that at least one exercise would have had a fully worked out solution in the back of the book. Despite these two complaints, however, this is still an excellent book. Overall, Skyrms has provided his readers and students with a helpful introduction to inductive logic.
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