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Thomas, 1967, p. 410. 5 H. Reichenbach, The Rise of Scientific Philosophy, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951, p. 245. 6 See H. Reichenbach, Experience and Prediction, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1938, sections 39, 42. 7 See W. Salmon, 'On Vindicating Induction', in H. Kyburg and E. 27-28. 8 See W. Salmon, 'Vindication ofInduction', in H. Feigl and G. ), Current Issues in the Philosophy of Science, New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1961, pp. 25()"'255. 9 Salmon, 'The Justification of Inductive Rules of Inference', p.
It is clear that we have much to do before completing the third step because of the huge task required to justify premises X and XI. But it is worth noting that when that task is finished, and we have also justified premise II of the argument in the first step, then the conclusions of the first three arguments, namely, III, VITI, and XII, will be justified, as well as what is simply deductively derivable from them. Consequently, at that point the following important intermediate conclusion, which follows from III, VIII, and XII, will be justified: XIII.
Feigl and G. ), Current Issues in the Philosophy of Science, New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1961, pp. 25()"'255. 9 Salmon, 'The Justification of Inductive Rules of Inference', p. 37. 10 See I. Hacking, 'One Problem About Induction', in I. ), op. , pp. 4451; and, for Salmon, 'Reply' in that volume, pp. 89-90. 11 See G. Harman, 'The Inference to the Best Explanation', Philosophical Review 74 (1965), 88-95. 12 For this problem, see I. Hacking, 'Salmon's Vindication of Induction', Journal of Philosophy 62 (1965), 263.