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The logical response to a noisy worldIn Mike Oaksford & Nick Chater (eds.), Cognition and Conditionals: Probability and Logic in Human Thought, Oxford University Press. 2010.
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The logical response to a noisy worldIn Mike Oaksford & Nick Chater (eds.), Cognition and Conditionals: Probability and Logic in Human Thought, Oxford University Press. 2010.
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111William A. Dembski. Randomness by design. Noûs, vol. 25 , pp. 75–106Journal of Symbolic Logic 57 (2): 758-759. 1992.
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231Generalized quantification as substructural logicJournal of Symbolic Logic 61 (3): 1006-1044. 1996.We show how sequent calculi for some generalized quantifiers can be obtained by generalizing the Herbrand approach to ordinary first order proof theory. Typical of the Herbrand approach, as compared to plain sequent calculus, is increased control over relations of dependence between variables. In the case of generalized quantifiers, explicit attention to relations of dependence becomes indispensible for setting up proof systems. It is shown that this can be done by turning variables into structu…Read more
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66Correspondence and Completeness for Generalized QuantifiersLogic Journal of the IGPL 3 (2-3): 167-190. 1995.
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85An Introduction to the Special Issue on Question ProcessingLogic and Logical Philosophy 26 (3): 285-288. 2017.An Introduction to the Special Issue on Question Processing.
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680Abstracte begrippen en concrete werkelijkheid - Twee vragen voor Hans RadderAlgemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 106 (1): 69-74. 2014.In zijn artikel geeft Hans Radder een rijk en veelomvattend beeld van zijn ideeën over een aantal centrale aspecten van wetenschap en wetenschappelijke experimenten, en de rol die materiële realisatie, interpretatie en abstractie daarin spelen. Het is een uiteenzetting op een hoog niveau van abstractie, op basis van veel eerder gepubliceerd werk. Het is ook een beeld met grote samenhang: de diverse aspecten die de revue passeren zijn op allerlei wijzen aan elkaar gerelateerd. Als men uit zo’n s…Read more
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209Von Mises' definition of random sequences reconsideredJournal of Symbolic Logic 52 (3): 725-755. 1987.We review briefly the attempts to define random sequences. These attempts suggest two theorems: one concerning the number of subsequence selection procedures that transform a random sequence into a random sequence; the other concerning the relationship between definitions of randomness based on subsequence selection and those based on statistical tests.
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871Naturalising Mathematics? A Wittgensteinian PerspectivePhilosophies 7 (4): 85. 2022.There is a noticeable gap between results of cognitive neuroscientific research into basic mathematical abilities and philosophical and empirical investigations of mathematics as a distinct intellectual activity. The paper explores the relevance of a Wittgensteinian framework for dealing with this discrepancy.
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82Abstracties en idealisaties: de constructie van de moderne taalkundeTijdschrift Voor Filosofie 72 (4): 749-776. 2010.The paper addresses the way in which modern linguistics, − in particular, but not exclusively, the generative tradition − , has constructed its core concepts. It argues that a particular form of construction, reminiscent of, but crucially different from, abstrac- tion, which is dubbed ‘idealisation’, plays a central role here. The resemblances and differences between abstractions and idealisations are investigated, and consequences of the reliance on idealisations are reviewed.
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222Logic as Marr's Computational Level: Four Case StudiesTopics in Cognitive Science 7 (2): 287-298. 2015.We sketch four applications of Marr's levels‐of‐analysis methodology to the relations between logic and experimental data in the cognitive neuroscience of language and reasoning. The first part of the paper illustrates the explanatory power of computational level theories based on logic. We show that a Bayesian treatment of the suppression task in reasoning with conditionals is ruled out by EEG data, supporting instead an analysis based on defeasible logic. Further, we describe how results from …Read more
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79An Introduction to the Special Issue on Logic, Cognition and ArgumentationLogic and Logical Philosophy 27 (4): 417-419. 2018.In recent years we have witnessed a cognitive or ‘practical’ turn in logic [Gabbay and Woods, 2005; Urbański, 2011]. The most fundamental claim of its proponents is that logic has much to say about actual reasoning and argumentation. This cognitively-orientated logic. It acquires a new task of “systematically keeping track of changing representations of information” [van Benthem, 2008, p. 73], and, due to all the achievements of the mathematisation of logic, is fully up to this task. It also con…Read more
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74The logic and topology of kant’s temporal continuumReview of Symbolic Logic 11 (1): 160-206. 2018.In this paper we provide a mathematical model of Kant’s temporal continuum that yields formal correlates for Kant’s informal treatment of this concept in theCritique of Pure Reasonand in other works of his critical period. We show that the formal model satisfies Kant’s synthetic a priori principles for time and that it even illuminates what “faculties and functions” must be in place, as “conditions for the possibility of experience”, for time to satisfy such principles. We then present a mathema…Read more
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107Semantic Interpretation as Computation in Nonmonotonic Logic: The Real Meaning of the Suppression TaskCognitive Science 29 (6): 919-960. 2005.Interpretation is the process whereby a hearer reasons to an interpretation of a speaker's discourse. The hearer normally adopts a credulous attitude to the discourse, at least for the purposes of interpreting it. That is to say the hearer tries to accommodate the truth of all the speaker's utterances in deriving an intended model. We present a nonmonotonic logical model of this process which defines unique minimal preferred models and efficiently simulates a kind of closed‐world reasoning of pa…Read more
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64Discourse Processing in Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)Journal of Logic, Language and Information 17 (4): 467-487. 2008.ADHD is a psychiatric disorder characterised by persistent and developmentally inappropriate levels of inattention, impulsivity and hyperactivity. It is known that children with ADHD tend to produce incoherent discourses, e.g. by narrating events out of sequence. Here the aetiology of ADHD becomes of interest. One prominent theory is that ADHD is an executive function disorder, showing deficiencies of planning. Given the close link between planning, verb tense and discourse coherence postulated …Read more
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40Logic in the study of psychiatric disorders: executive function and rule-followingTopoi 26 (1): 97-114. 2007.Executive function has become an important concept in explanations of psychiatric disorders, but we currently lack comprehensive models of normal executive function and of its malfunctions. Here we illustrate how defeasible logical analysis can aid progress in this area. We illustrate using autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) as example disorders, and show how logical analysis reveals commonalities between linguistic and non-linguistic behaviours within each disorder, and …Read more
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206The processing consequences of the imperfective paradoxJournal of Semantics 24 (4): 307-330. 2007.In this paper we present a semantic analysis of the imperfective paradox based on the Event Calculus, a planning formalism characterizing a class of models which can be computed by connectionist networks. We report the results of a questionnaire that support the semantic theory and suggest that different aspectual classes of VPs in the progressive give rise to different entailment patterns. Further, a processing model is outlined, combining the semantic analysis with the psycholinguistic princip…Read more
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64A Logic of VisionLinguistics and Philosophy 23 (1): 1-92. 2000.This essay attempts to develop a psychologically informed semantics of perception reports, whose predictions match with the linguistic data. As suggested by the quotation from Miller and Johnson-Laird, we take a hallmark of perception to be its fallible nature; the resulting semantics thus necessarily differs from situation semantics. On the psychological side, our main inspiration is Marr's (1982) theory of vision, which can easily accomodate fallible perception. In Marr's theory, vision is a m…Read more
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110Logic programming, probability, and two-system accounts of reasoning: a rejoinder to Oaksford and ChaterThinking and Reasoning 22 (3): 355-368. 2016.This reply to Oaksford and Chater’s ’s critical discussion of our use of logic programming to model and predict patterns of conditional reasoning will frame the dispute in terms of the semantics of the conditional. We begin by outlining some common features of LP and probabilistic conditionals in knowledge-rich reasoning over long-term memory knowledge bases. For both, context determines causal strength; there are inferences from the absence of certain evidence; and both have analogues of the Ra…Read more
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48Explaining intersubjectivity. A comment on Arie Verhagen, Constructions of IntersubjectivityCognitive Linguistics 19 (1). 2008.
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191The axiomatization of randomnessJournal of Symbolic Logic 55 (3): 1143-1167. 1990.We present a faithful axiomatization of von Mises' notion of a random sequence, using an abstract independence relation. A byproduct is a quantifier elimination theorem for Friedman's "almost all" quantifier in terms of this independence relation
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635What Cost Naturalism?In Kata Balogh & Wiebke Petersen (eds.), Bridging formal and conceptual semantics: selected papers of BRIDGE-14, Dup. pp. 89-117. 2017.The paper traces some of the assumptions that have informed conservative naturalism in linguistic theory, critically examines their justification, and proposes a more liberal alternative.
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42Interpretation, representation, and deductive reasoningIn Jonathan Eric Adler & Lance J. Rips (eds.), Reasoning: Studies of Human Inference and its Foundations, Cambridge University Press. pp. 223-248. 2008.
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153Language, linguistics and cognitionIn Ruth M. Kempson, Tim Fernando & Nicholas Asher (eds.), Philosophy of linguistics, North Holland. 2012.
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83Editorial: An invitation to cognitive science (review)Journal of Logic, Language and Information 10 (2): 145-146. 2001.
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Areas of Specialization
| Science, Logic, and Mathematics |
| History of Western Philosophy |