The dual-process turn: How recent defenses of dual-process theories of reasoning fail |
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Authors: | Joshua Mugg |
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Affiliation: | York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, Ontario, M3J 1P3, Canada |
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Abstract: | In response to the claim that the properties typically used to distinguish System 1 from System 2 crosscut one another, Carruthers, Evans, and Stanovich have abandoned the System 1/System 2 distinction. Evans and Stanovich both opt for a dual-process theory, according to which Type-1 processes are autonomous and Type-2 processes use working memory and involve cognitive decoupling. Carruthers maintains a two-system account, according to which there is an intuitive system and a reflective system. I argue that these defenses of dual-process theory face two problems. First, as pointed out by Sloman, these new dual-process theories cast the net of “reasoning” too wide. Second, and more importantly, this singular distinction cannot accomplish the explanatory work needed to support dual-process theory. These theorists must fall back on using various properties from the Standard Menu in explanations, thereby committing these accounts to a “Standard View” that they had hoped to avoid. Thus, these theorists face a dilemma: either the distinction between intuitive and reflective (or autonomous and working memory involving) falls back on using the properties of the Standard Menu, or it lacks the explanatory promise that made dual-process theory attractive. |
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Keywords: | Cognitive Architecture dual-process Higher-Order Theories of Cognition Jonathan Evans Keith Stanovich Peter Carruthers reasoning two-system |
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