Abstract
The maximum entropy principle is widely used to determine non-committal probabilities on a finite domain, subject to a set of constraints, but its application to continuous domains is notoriously problematic. This paper concerns an intermediate case, where the domain is a first-order predicate language. Two strategies have been put forward for applying the maximum entropy principle on such a domain: (i) applying it to finite sublanguages and taking the pointwise limit of the resulting probabilities as the size n of the sublanguage increases; (ii) selecting a probability function on the language as a whole whose entropy on finite sublanguages of size n is not dominated by that of any other probability function for sufficiently large n. The entropy-limit conjecture says that, where these two approaches yield determinate probabilities, the two methods yield the same probabilities. If this conjecture is found to be true, it would provide a boost to the project of seeking a single canonical inductive logic—a project which faltered when Carnap's attempts in this direction succeeded only in determining a continuum of inductive methods. The truth of the conjecture would also boost the project of providing a canonical characterisation of normal or default models of first-order theories. Hitherto, the entropy-limit conjecture has been verified for languages which contain only unary predicate symbols and also for the case in which the constraints can be captured by a categorical statement of Σ1 quantifier complexity. This paper shows that the entropy-limit conjecture also holds for categorical statements of Π1 complexity, for various non-categorical constraints, and in certain other general situations.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 102870 |
Journal | Annals of Pure and Applied Logic |
Volume | 172 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Feb 2021 |
Keywords
- Default models
- Inductive logic
- Maximum entropy
- Normal models
- Objective Bayesianism
- Probabilistic constraints on predicate languages