Cognitive success: instrumental justifications of normative systems of reasoning

被引:8
|
作者
Schurz, Gerhard [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Dusseldorf, Dept Philosophy, D-40225 Dusseldorf, Germany
来源
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY | 2014年 / 5卷
关键词
is and ought; normative accounts of rationality; means-end inference; cognitive success; general vs; locally adaptive rationality; JUDGMENT; ACCOUNTS; LOGIC;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00625
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
In the first part of the paper (sec. 14), I argue that Elqayam and Evan's (2011) distinction between normative and instrumental conceptions of cognitive rationality corresponds to deontological vs. teleological accounts in meta-ethics. I suggest that Elqayam and Evans' distinction be replaced by the distinction between a-priori intuition-based vs. a-posteriori success-based accounts of cognitive rationality. The value of cognitive success lies in its instrumental rationality for almost-all practical purposes. In the second part (sec. 57), I point out that the Elqayam and Evans's distinction between normative and instrumental rationality is coupled with a second distinction: between logically general vs. locally adaptive accounts of rationality. I argue that these are two independent distinctions that should be treated as independent dimensions. I also demonstrate that logically general systems of reasoning can be instrumentally justified. However, such systems can only be cognitively successful if they are paired with successful inductive reasoning, which is the area where the program of adaptive (ecological) rationality emerged, because there are no generally optimal inductive reasoning methods. I argue that the practical necessity of reasoning under changing environments constitutes a dilemma for ecological rationality, which I attempt to solve within a dual account of rationality.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Reasoning with Justifications
    Fitting, Melvin
    [J]. TOWARDS MATHEMATICAL PHILOSOPHY, 2009, 28 : 107 - 123
  • [2] Reasoning about Normative Systems
    van der Hoek, Wiebe
    [J]. LEGAL KNOWLEDGE AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2010, 223 : 3 - 3
  • [3] Reasoning about Dynamic Normative Systems
    Knobbout, Max
    Dastani, Mehdi
    Meyer, John-Jules Ch
    [J]. LOGICS IN ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE, JELIA 2014, 2014, 8761 : 628 - 636
  • [4] Temporal reasoning:: An application to normative systems
    Stratulat, T
    Clérin-Debart, F
    Enjalbert, P
    [J]. EIGHTH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON TEMPORAL REPRESENTATION AND REASONING, PROCEEDINGS, 2001, : 41 - 47
  • [5] INSTRUMENTAL REASONING AND SYSTEMS METHODOLOGY - MATTESICH,R
    DIESING, P
    [J]. PHILOSOPHY OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES, 1981, 11 (04) : 516 - 517
  • [6] INSTRUMENTAL REASONING AND SYSTEMS METHODOLOGY - MATTESSICH,R
    PHILLIPS, DC
    [J]. BRITISH JOURNAL FOR THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE, 1980, 31 (01): : 89 - 90
  • [7] Limitations and justifications for analogical reasoning
    Johnson, Summer
    Burger, Ingrid
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BIOETHICS, 2006, 6 (06): : 59 - 61
  • [8] The normative and scientific justifications for development theory
    Brett, E. A.
    [J]. POLITIKON, 2006, 33 (02) : 197 - 219
  • [9] Instrumental reasoning
    Broome, J
    [J]. RATIONALITY, RULES, AND STRUCTURE, 2000, 28 : 195 - 207
  • [10] DEFEASIBLE DEONTIC REASONING AND ITS APPLICATIONS TO NORMATIVE SYSTEMS
    RYU, YU
    LEE, RM
    [J]. DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEMS, 1995, 14 (01) : 59 - 73