Metodo

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Journal | Volume | Article

234727

The no miracles argument and the base rate fallacy

Leah Henderson

pp. 1295-1302

Abstract

The no miracles argument is one of the main arguments for scientific realism. Recently it has been alleged that the no miracles argument is fundamentally flawed because it commits the base rate fallacy. The allegation is based on the idea that the appeal of the no miracles argument arises from inappropriate neglect of the base rate of approximate truth among the relevant population of theories. However, the base rate fallacy allegation relies on an assumption of random sampling of individuals from the population which cannot be made in the case of the no miracles argument. Therefore the base rate fallacy objection to the no miracles argument fails. I distinguish between a “local” and a “global” form of the no miracles argument. The base rate fallacy objection has been leveled at the local version. I argue that the global argument plays a key role in supporting a base-rate-fallacy-free formulation of the local version of the argument.

Publication details

Published in:

Holm Sune, Basl John (2017) Teleological organisation. Synthese 194 (4).

Pages: 1295-1302

DOI: 10.1007/s11229-015-0995-7

Full citation:

Henderson Leah (2017) „The no miracles argument and the base rate fallacy“. Synthese 194 (4), 1295–1302.