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Janina Hosiasson Lindenbaum

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Died
  
1942, Vilnius, Lithuania


Name
  
Janina Hosiasson-Lindenbaum


Janina Hosiasson-Lindenbaum (1899–1942) was a Polish logician and philosopher. She published the first printed discussion of the raven paradox, which she attributed to Carl Hempel, and he subsequently popularized the raven paradox through an article in Mind in 1945.

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Personal life

She studied philosophy at the University of Warsaw, the lecturers were: Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz, Tadeusz Kotarbinski and Jan Łukasiewicz. She received her Ph.D. dissertation on the Justification of Inductive Reasoning . She graduated from the University of Cambridge in the semester 1929/1930. She was a friend of Karl Popper. While she pursued her research, she taught philosophy in high school. After the outbreak of World War II, lived in Vilnius, where she engaged in the activities of the Vilnius Philosophical Society. Her husband was mathematician Adolf Lindenbaum. In April 1942, she and her husband were arrested by the gestapo and she was shot by the Nazis.

Research interests

At the center of her scientific activity was the logic of induction. She focused on the following issues:

  • Types of induction
  • Applying the theory of probability to the logic of induction
  • Justification of inductive inference conclusions
  • Psychological analysis of inductive reasoning.
  • References

    Janina Hosiasson-Lindenbaum Wikipedia