Abstract

Any adequate theory of chance must accommodate some version of David Lewis's 'Principal Principle', and Lewis has argued forcibly that believers in primitive propensities have a problem in explaining what makes the Principle true. But Lewis can only derive (a revised version of) the Principle from his own Humean theory by putting constraints on inductive rationality which cannot be given a Humean rationale. 1 Humeanism 2 Humean chances 3 Humeanism and the Principal Principle

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