How our brains reason logically |
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Authors: | Markus Knauff |
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Affiliation: | (1) Experimental Cognitive Psychology Unit, University of Giessen, Otto-Behaghel-Strasse 10F, 35394 Giessen, Germany |
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Abstract: | The aim of this article is to strengthen links between cognitive brain research and formal logic. The work covers three fundamental sorts of logical inferences: reasoning in the propositional calculus, i.e. inferences with the conditional “if...then”, reasoning in the predicate calculus, i.e. inferences based on quantifiers such as “all”, “some”, “none”, and reasoning with n-place relations. Studies with brain-damaged patients and neuroimaging experiments indicate that such logical inferences are implemented in overlapping but different bilateral cortical networks, including parts of the fronto-temporal cortex, the posterior parietal cortex, and the visual cortices. I argue that these findings show that we do not use a single deterministic strategy for solving logical reasoning problems. This account resolves many disputes about how humans reason logically and why we sometimes deviate from the norms of formal logic. |
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Keywords: | Logical thinking Reasoning Brain Mental models Mental logic |
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