Abstract The idea that reasoning is a singular accom-plishment of the human species has an ancient pedigree. Yet this idea remains as controversial as it is ancient. Those who would deny reasoning to nonhuman animals typically hold a language-based conception of inference which pla-ces it beyond the reach of languageless creatures. Others reject such an anthropocentric conception of reasoning on the basis of similar performance by humans and animals in some reasoning tasks, such as transitive inference. Here, building on the modal similarity theory of Vigo [J Exp Theor Artif Intell, 2008 (in press)], we offer an account in which reasoning depends on a core suite of subsymbolic processes for similarity assessment, discrimination, and categor...
International audienceAnalogical reasoning is a cornerstone of human cognition, but the extent and l...
It is not possible to know directly what animals think because they cannot speak to us about it. We ...
AbstractAlexis D. Mourenza(Dis)Appearing Minds: Methodological Assumptions and Epistemological Biase...
In this paper I reject the possibility that animal reasoning, negation in particular, necessarily in...
This interdisciplinary book aims to raise the question of the possible non-linguistic aspects of rea...
A capacity for transitive inference (i.e. if aRb and bRc then aRc) was thought to be uniquely human....
The thesis of discontinuity between humans and nonhumans requires evidence from formal reasoning tas...
Analogical reasoning in a 16-yr-old female chimpan7.ee (Sarah) was studied in five experiments. The ...
Several nonhuman animal species have been claimed to successfully pass tests indicative of relationa...
Elucidating the nature, use, and origin of knowledge in animals is one of the major endeavors of com...
Bramdom’s Work Brandom denies animals implicit reasoning by emphasizing their in-ability to make inf...
Human language without analogy is like a zebra without stripes. The ability to understand analogies,...
If a conclusion was reached that creatures without a language capability exhibit some form of a capa...
Recently, Vigo and Allen (2009) proposed a view of transitive inference as categorization that depen...
The study of animal cognition is rife with controversy, and among the most long-standing and most in...
International audienceAnalogical reasoning is a cornerstone of human cognition, but the extent and l...
It is not possible to know directly what animals think because they cannot speak to us about it. We ...
AbstractAlexis D. Mourenza(Dis)Appearing Minds: Methodological Assumptions and Epistemological Biase...
In this paper I reject the possibility that animal reasoning, negation in particular, necessarily in...
This interdisciplinary book aims to raise the question of the possible non-linguistic aspects of rea...
A capacity for transitive inference (i.e. if aRb and bRc then aRc) was thought to be uniquely human....
The thesis of discontinuity between humans and nonhumans requires evidence from formal reasoning tas...
Analogical reasoning in a 16-yr-old female chimpan7.ee (Sarah) was studied in five experiments. The ...
Several nonhuman animal species have been claimed to successfully pass tests indicative of relationa...
Elucidating the nature, use, and origin of knowledge in animals is one of the major endeavors of com...
Bramdom’s Work Brandom denies animals implicit reasoning by emphasizing their in-ability to make inf...
Human language without analogy is like a zebra without stripes. The ability to understand analogies,...
If a conclusion was reached that creatures without a language capability exhibit some form of a capa...
Recently, Vigo and Allen (2009) proposed a view of transitive inference as categorization that depen...
The study of animal cognition is rife with controversy, and among the most long-standing and most in...
International audienceAnalogical reasoning is a cornerstone of human cognition, but the extent and l...
It is not possible to know directly what animals think because they cannot speak to us about it. We ...
AbstractAlexis D. Mourenza(Dis)Appearing Minds: Methodological Assumptions and Epistemological Biase...