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Reasoning: Studies of Human Inference and Its Foundations

Reasoning: Studies of Human Inference and Its Foundations

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Lance J. Rips Edited by Jonathan E. Adler
Cambridge University Press, 7/10/2008
EAN 9780521612746, ISBN10: 0521612748

Paperback, 1072 pages, 25.4 x 17.7 x 4.5 cm
Language: English

This interdisciplinary work is a collection of major essays on reasoning: deductive, inductive, abductive, belief revision, defeasible (non-monotonic), cross cultural, conversational, and argumentative. They are each oriented toward contemporary empirical studies. The book focuses on foundational issues, including paradoxes, fallacies, and debates about the nature of rationality, the traditional modes of reasoning, as well as counterfactual and causal reasoning. It also includes chapters on the interface between reasoning and other forms of thought. In general, this last set of essays represents growth points in reasoning research, drawing connections to pragmatics, cross-cultural studies, emotion and evolution.

Preface
List of contributors
Introduction
philosophical foundations
Part I. Foundations of Reasoning
Section 1. Some Philosophical Viewpoints
1. Change in view
principles of reasoning
2. Belief and the will
3. Internal and external reasons
4. Paradoxes
Section 2. Fallacies and Rationality
5. When rationality fails
6. Extensional versus intuitive reasoning
the conjunction fallacy in probability judgment
7. Can human irrationality be experimentally demonstrated?
8. Breakdown of will
Part II. Modes of Reasoning
Section 3. Deductive Reasoning
9. Logical approaches to human deductive reasoning
10. Mental modes and deductive reasoning
11. Interpretation, representation, and deductive reasoning
12. Reasoning with quantifiers
13. The problem of deduction
Section 4. Induction
14. Patterns, rules, and inferences
15. Inductive logic and inductive reasoning
16. Reasoning in conceptual spaces
17. Category-based induction
18. When explanations compete
the role of explanatory coherence on judgments of likelihood
19. Properties of inductive reasoning
Section 5. Dual and Integrative Approaches
20. Human reasoning and argumentation
the probabalistic approach
21. Individual differences in reasoning and the algorithmic/intentional level distinction in cognitive science
22. Reasoning, decision making, and rationality
Section 6. Abduction and Belief Change
23. Defeasible reasoning
24. Explanatory coherence
25. Belief revision
26. Belief, doubt, and evidentialism
27. Reflections on conscious reflection
mechanisms of impairment by reasons analysis
28. Belief change as propositional update
Section 7. Causal and Counterfactual Reasoning
29. Causal thinking
30. Causation
31. Propensities and counterfactuals
the loser that almost won
Section 8. Argumentation
32. The layout of arguments
33. The skills of argument
34. Reasoning and conversation
Part III. Interactions of Reasoning in Human Thought
Section 9. Reasoning and Pragmatics
35. Specificationism
36. Presupposition, attention, and why-questions
37. Further notes on logic and conversation
38. The social context of reasoning
conversational inference and rational judgment
Section 10. Domain-Specific, Goal-Based, and Evolutionary Approaches
39. Domain-specific knowledge and conceptual change
40. Pragmatic reasoning schemas
41. Beyond intuition and instinct blindness
toward an evolutionarily rigorous cognitive science
42. Use or misuse of the selection task? Rejoinder to Fiddick, Cosmides, and Tooby
43. Why we are so good at catching cheaters
44. The modularity of mind
an essay on faculty psychology
45. Commitment Brian Skyrms
46. Evolution of inference
Section 11. Reasoning across Cultures
47. Reasoning across cultures
48. Culture and systems of thought
holistic versus analytic cognition
49. On the very idea of a conceptual scheme
50. The truth in relativism
Section 12. Biology, Emotions, and Reasoning
51. Logic and biology
emotional inference and emotions in reasoning
52. Distinct brain loci in deductive versus probabilistic reasoning
53. The emotional dog and its rational tail
a social intuitionist approach to moral judgment
Index.

"This book provides a very comprehensive, almost encyclopedic overview in the general area of reasoning. It encompasses psychological research and philosophical considerations of inductive paradoxes, along with useful sections on argumentation, reasoning and cultures, emotions and reasoning, abduction, and belief change. [...] Readers would benefit from a background in introductory logic or a familiarity with the history and practice of formal reasoning, especially for those articles in which formalization predominates over natural language. [...], this worthwhile book will benefit a wide range of readers since most of the articles deal with problems and issues that are fundamental to understanding the various ways that reasoning works, can work in context, or could work to inform prescriptions in ethics or arguments addressed to the best explanations. Recommended."
--J. Gough, Red Deer College, CHOICE