Title of article
How many kinds of reasoning? Inference, probability, and natural language semantics
Author/Authors
Lassiter، نويسنده , , Daniel F. Goodman، نويسنده , , Noah D.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Pages
12
From page
123
To page
134
Abstract
The “new paradigm” unifying deductive and inductive reasoning in a Bayesian framework (Oaksford & Chater, 2007; Over, 2009) has been claimed to be falsified by results which show sharp differences between reasoning about necessity vs. plausibility (Heit & Rotello, 2010; Rips, 2001; Rotello & Heit, 2009). We provide a probabilistic model of reasoning with modal expressions such as “necessary” and “plausible” informed by recent work in formal semantics of natural language, and show that it predicts the possibility of non-linear response patterns which have been claimed to be problematic. Our model also makes a strong monotonicity prediction, while two-dimensional theories predict the possibility of reversals in argument strength depending on the modal word chosen. Predictions were tested using a novel experimental paradigm that replicates the previously-reported response patterns with a minimal manipulation, changing only one word of the stimulus between conditions. We found a spectrum of reasoning “modes” corresponding to different modal words, and strong support for our model’s monotonicity prediction. This indicates that probabilistic approaches to reasoning can account in a clear and parsimonious way for data previously argued to falsify them, as well as new, more fine-grained, data. It also illustrates the importance of careful attention to the semantics of language employed in reasoning experiments.
Keywords
reasoning , Induction , Deduction , Probabilistic model , Natural language semantics
Journal title
Cognition
Serial Year
2015
Journal title
Cognition
Record number
2078339
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