Unless a statement is logically necessarily true or false, are we ever justified to make an inference on anything?
No matter what one uses or what reasons one comes up with to justify X, one can further ask for reasons to justify that ad infinitum. Sooner or later, you either have to have a foundational unjustified belief or some form of circularity or whatever else philosophers have conjured up to address.
My question is what is so specially problematic about induction that isn’t problematic within the concept of justification in general? Sure, the past doesn’t necessarily imply the future.
But we have no reason to justify believing that the world is a simulation vs. not either, apart from just assuming that this world is all there is. We have no reason to justify that there is no invisible demon in front of us breathing undetectable fire towards us just because we can’t observe it. And so on and so forth.
It seems that induction is just a specific form of the more general problem that almost none of our beliefs, apart from perhaps the belief that we are conscious, can be justified.
Note that changing justification to mean probabilistic justification does not escape this problem. One must first define what it means, in an ontological sense, for evidence to support a certain hypothesis with a degree of 99% probability for example. This must be first defined and then justified which as far as I’m aware, no philosopher has managed to do so without resorting to circularity again.
So to summarize, is the problem of induction really just a problem of justification?