Unsettled Thoughts

My book "Unsettled Thoughts: A Theory of Degrees of Rationality" was recently published with Oxford University Press

You can read the introduction here.

Here's a short description of the content:

How should thinkers cope with uncertainty? What makes their degrees of belief rational, and how should they reason about uncertain matters? In epistemology, recent research has attempted to answer these questions by developing formal models of ideally rational credences. However, we know from psychological research that perfect rationality is unattainable for human thinkers--and so this raises the question of how rational ideals can apply to human thinkers. A popular reply is that the more a thinker's imperfectly rational credences approximate compliance with norms of ideal rationality, the better. But what exactly does this mean? Why is it better to be less irrational, if we can't ever be completely rational? And what does being closer to ideally rational amount to? If ideal models of rationality are supposed to help us understand the rationality of human, imperfect thinkers, we need answers to these questions. Unsettled Thoughts breaks new ground in the study of rationality in providing these answers: we can explain why it's better to be less irrational, because less irrational degrees of belief are generally more accurate and better at guiding our actions. Moreover, the way in which approximating ideal rationality is beneficial can be made formally precise by using a variety of distance measures that track the benefits of being more rational.


Below you find some commentary on the book. Email me if you don't have access to these sources.

Reviews of the book are here:

Analysis, Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie, Mind, Philosophical Psychology, The Philosophical Review

A book symposium was published in Philosophical Studies, which you can find here:

Précis

Comments by Branden Fitelson

Comments by Jason Konek

Replies to Fitelson and Konek