The paper argues that the two best known formal logical fallacies, namely denying the antecedent (DA) and affirming the consequent (AC) are not just basic and simple errors, which prove human irrationality, but rather informational shortcuts, which may provide a quick and dirty way of extracting useful information from the environment. DA and AC are shown to be degraded versions of Bayes' theorem, once this is stripped of some of its probabilities. The less the probabilities count, the closer these fallacies become to a reasoning that is not only informationally useful but also logically valid
This paper illustrates the difficulties that context-dependence poses for defining the so-called log...
The paper starts by describing and clarifying what Williamson calls the consequence fallacy. I show ...
The information age is marked by a tremendous amount of incoming information. Even so, we are almost...
The paper argues that the two best known formal logical fallacies, namely denying the antecedent (DA...
Abstract: Recent work on condi-tional reasoning argues that denying the antecedent [DA] and affirmin...
Recent work on conditional reasoning argues that denying the antecedent [DA] and affirming the conse...
This paper offers a solution to the problem of understanding how a fallacious argument can be decept...
In this paper I identify a fallacy. The fallacy is worth noting for practical and theoretical reason...
An infonnal fallacy is a reasoning error with three features: the reasoning employs an implicit coge...
Humans have used arguments for defending or refuting statements long before the creation of logic as...
International audienceThis article presents the dialogical history of the production and the contest...
Classical informal reasoning "fallacies," for example, begging the question or arguing from ignoranc...
This paper illustrates the difficulties that context-dependence poses for defining the so-called log...
The paper starts by describing and clarifying what Williamson calls the consequence fallacy. I show ...
The information age is marked by a tremendous amount of incoming information. Even so, we are almost...
The paper argues that the two best known formal logical fallacies, namely denying the antecedent (DA...
Abstract: Recent work on condi-tional reasoning argues that denying the antecedent [DA] and affirmin...
Recent work on conditional reasoning argues that denying the antecedent [DA] and affirming the conse...
This paper offers a solution to the problem of understanding how a fallacious argument can be decept...
In this paper I identify a fallacy. The fallacy is worth noting for practical and theoretical reason...
An infonnal fallacy is a reasoning error with three features: the reasoning employs an implicit coge...
Humans have used arguments for defending or refuting statements long before the creation of logic as...
International audienceThis article presents the dialogical history of the production and the contest...
Classical informal reasoning "fallacies," for example, begging the question or arguing from ignoranc...
This paper illustrates the difficulties that context-dependence poses for defining the so-called log...
The paper starts by describing and clarifying what Williamson calls the consequence fallacy. I show ...
The information age is marked by a tremendous amount of incoming information. Even so, we are almost...