“…Of the various philosophers who have considered a trivalent treatment of indicative conditionals along these lines, several—notably Adams, Mackie, and Ducrot—were particularly interested in expounding the connection between conditionals and supposition that is suggested by the Ramsey test. Indeed, recent psychological studies have supported the trivalent theory (e.g., Baratgin, Over, & Politzer, 2013; Baratgin, Politzer, Over, & Takahashi, 2018; Politzer, Jamet, & Baratgin, 2020; Politzer, Over, & Baratgin, 2010), and it has been taken up in psychological work as the main representative of a “suppositional” theory of conditionals, supplanting the “no truth‐value” theory popularized in philosophical work under the influence of Adams, Edgington, and Bennett. In addition, several more recent formal studies have expanded on de Finetti's observation that his theory enforces the equation between probabilities of conditionals and conditional probabilities, showing that it circumvents a variety of triviality results (Lassiter, 2020; Mura, 2009; Paneni & Scozzafava, 2003; Rothschild, 2014).…”