This monograph explores the deeply cognitive roots of human scientific quest. The process of making scientific inferences is continuous with the day-to-day inferential activity of individuals, and is predominantly inductive in nature. Inductive inference, which is fallible, exploratory, and open-ended, is of essential relevance in our incessant efforts at making sense of a complex and uncertain world around us, and covers a vast range of cognitive activities, among which scientific exploration constitutes the pinnacle. Inductive inference has a personal aspect to it, being rooted in the cognitive unconscious of individuals, which has recently been found to be of paramount importance in a wide range of complex cognitive processes. One oth...
How do we make sense of complex evidence? What are the cognitive principles that allow detectives to...
The classical view that equates rationality with adherence to the laws of probability theory and log...
In my thesis I pursue the question of how it is that we learn about the mind from the brain. My appr...
This monograph is an in-depth and engaging discourse on the deeply cognitive roots of human scientif...
Whereas an inference (deductive as well as inductive) is usually viewed as being valid in virtue of ...
In my dissertation, I advance and defend a broad account of reasoning, including both the nature of ...
How do scientists think and reason? What are the psychological processes involved in scientific reas...
This volume explores abductive cognition, an important but, at least until the third quarter of the ...
"After its publication in 1967, The Foundations of Scientific Inference taught a generation of stude...
Although scientific reasoning is usually deliberate, it may also be influenced by the intuitive proc...
This book proposes an applied epistemological framework for investigating science, social cognition ...
Biological and Cultural Bases of Human Inference addresses the interface between social science and ...
It is my proposal that future cognitive science needs to be developed in the context of a general sc...
I argue that inference can tolerate forms of self-ignorance and that these cases of inference underm...
The human mind has developed numerous cognitive tools to allow us to navigate the uncertainty of the...
How do we make sense of complex evidence? What are the cognitive principles that allow detectives to...
The classical view that equates rationality with adherence to the laws of probability theory and log...
In my thesis I pursue the question of how it is that we learn about the mind from the brain. My appr...
This monograph is an in-depth and engaging discourse on the deeply cognitive roots of human scientif...
Whereas an inference (deductive as well as inductive) is usually viewed as being valid in virtue of ...
In my dissertation, I advance and defend a broad account of reasoning, including both the nature of ...
How do scientists think and reason? What are the psychological processes involved in scientific reas...
This volume explores abductive cognition, an important but, at least until the third quarter of the ...
"After its publication in 1967, The Foundations of Scientific Inference taught a generation of stude...
Although scientific reasoning is usually deliberate, it may also be influenced by the intuitive proc...
This book proposes an applied epistemological framework for investigating science, social cognition ...
Biological and Cultural Bases of Human Inference addresses the interface between social science and ...
It is my proposal that future cognitive science needs to be developed in the context of a general sc...
I argue that inference can tolerate forms of self-ignorance and that these cases of inference underm...
The human mind has developed numerous cognitive tools to allow us to navigate the uncertainty of the...
How do we make sense of complex evidence? What are the cognitive principles that allow detectives to...
The classical view that equates rationality with adherence to the laws of probability theory and log...
In my thesis I pursue the question of how it is that we learn about the mind from the brain. My appr...