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Peter Johnson

Bath Spa University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    87
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    5

 More details
  • Bath Spa University
    Department of Philosophy
    Regular Faculty
Areas of Interest
Aesthetics
Social and Political Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
  • All publications (87)
  • Evans, J. St. BT, 165
    with V. Girotto, D. Osherson, R. de OverHastie, N. Pennington, S. Iwasaki, J. Klayman, P. Legrenzi, and E. Shafir
    Cognition 49 299. 1993.
  •  75
    The meaning of modality
    Cognitive Science 2 (1): 17-26. 1978.
    This paper describes a semantics for modal terms such as can and may that is intended to model the mental representation of their meaning. The basic assumption of the theory is that the evaluation of a modal assertion involves an attempted mental construction of a specified alternative to a given situation rather than the separate evaluation of each member of a set of possible alternatives as would be required by a “possible worlds” semantics. The theory leads to the conclusion that, contrary to…Read more
    This paper describes a semantics for modal terms such as can and may that is intended to model the mental representation of their meaning. The basic assumption of the theory is that the evaluation of a modal assertion involves an attempted mental construction of a specified alternative to a given situation rather than the separate evaluation of each member of a set of possible alternatives as would be required by a “possible worlds” semantics. The theory leads to the conclusion that, contrary to what is often assumed, modal auxiliary verbs are unambiguous.
    Cognitive Sciences
  •  55
    Kahneman, Tversky, and Kahneman-Tversky: three ways of thinking
    Thinking and Reasoning 30 (4): 531-547. 2024.
    This homage to Danny Kahneman and Amos Tversky describes how each of them thought about psychology. It outlines the principal results of their collaborative research, which was their most original and most influential. Why? In search of an explanation it examines their joint thinking during their collaboration.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  70
    Reasoning From Quantified Modal Premises
    with Ana Cristina Quelhas and Célia Rasga
    Cognitive Science 48 (8). 2024.
    Quantified modal inferences interest logicians, linguists, and computer scientists, but no previous psychological study of them appears to be in the literature. Here is an example of one: All those artists are businessmen. Paulo is possibly one of the artists. What follows?People tend to conclude: Paulo is possibly a businessman (Experiment 1). It seems plausible, and it follows from an intuitive mental model in which Paulo is one of a set of artists who are businessmen. Further deliberation can…Read more
    Quantified modal inferences interest logicians, linguists, and computer scientists, but no previous psychological study of them appears to be in the literature. Here is an example of one: All those artists are businessmen. Paulo is possibly one of the artists. What follows?People tend to conclude: Paulo is possibly a businessman (Experiment 1). It seems plausible, and it follows from an intuitive mental model in which Paulo is one of a set of artists who are businessmen. Further deliberation can yield a model of an alternative possibility in which Paulo is not one of the artists, which confirms that the conclusion is only a possibility. The snag is that standard modal logics, which deal with possibilities, cannot yield a particular conclusion to any premises: Infinitely many follow validly (from any premises) but they do not include the present conclusion. Yet, further experiments corroborated a new mental model theory's predictions for various inferences (Experiment 2), for the occurrence of factual conclusions drawn from premises about possibilities (Experiment 3) and for inferences from premises of modal syllogisms (Experiment 4). The theory is therefore plausible, but we explore the feasibility of a cognitive theory based on modifications to modal logic.
    Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  •  11
    Are There Cross-Cultural Differences in Reasoning?
    with N. Y. Louise Lee
  •  12
    The Psychology of Su Doku Problems
    with Geoffrey P. Goodwin and N. Y. Louise Lee
  • Mental models, sentential reasoning, and illusory inferences
    In Carsten Held, Markus Knauff & Gottfried Vosgerau (eds.), Mental models and the mind: current developments in cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind, Elsevier. 2006.
    ReasoningDeductive Reasoning
  •  9
    The Revision of Beliefs about Causes and Enabling Conditions
    with Caren A. Frosch
  • OCk, athryn, 163 Byrne, Ruth MJ, 61 Cosmides, Leda, 187 Garnham, Alan, 45, 117
    with Jane Oakhill, Josef Perner, Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, Lance J. Rips, Jennifer A. Sanderson, Michael Siegal, and Yohtaro Takano
    Cognition 31 295. 1989.
  • Reasoning from múltiple conditionals: The interaction between content and structure
    with C. Santamaría and J. A. García-Madruga
    Thinking and Reasoning 4 97-122. 1998.
  • William H. Dray, History as Re-enactment: RG Collingwood's Idea of History
    Philosophical Investigations 21 88-90. 1998.
    R. G. Collingwood
  • Baron-Cohen, S., 149 Bloom, P., B1
    with N. Braisby, G. N. Carlson, L. Cestnick, C. G. Chambers, M. Coltheart, J. Davidoff, A. Fernald, S. P. Johnson, and T. Jolliffe
    Cognition 71 291. 1999.
  • Adi-Japha, E., 1 Ahn, W.-K., B35 Amsterlaw, JA, B35 Arnold, JE, B13
    with R. N. Aslin, P. Barrouillet, P. Bloom, S. A. Gelman, T. JaČrvinen, C. L. Krumhansl, J. F. Leca, M. J. Spivey, and K. Sullivan
    Cognition 76 297. 2000.
  •  4
    When 'or'means 'and': a study in mental models
    with P. E. Barres
    In Ashwin Ram & Kurt Eiselt (eds.), Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society: August 13 to 16, 1994, Georgia Institute of Technology, Erlbaum. pp. 475--478. 1994.
    Cognitive Sciences
  •  68
    Explanations make inconsistencies harder to detect
    with Sangeet Khemlani
    In S. Ohlsson & R. Catrambone (eds.), Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Cognitive Science Society. 2010.
  •  89
    Illusions of consistency in quantified assertions
    with Niklas Kunze, Sangeet Khemlani, and Max Lotstein
    In S. Ohlsson & R. Catrambone (eds.), Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Cognitive Science Society. 2010.
    Aspects of Consciousness
  •  56
    RG Collingwood and the Albert Memorial
    Collingwood and British Idealism Studies 15 (1): 7-40. 2009.
    The argument of this article is that the Albert Memorial acted as a catalyst for some of Collingwood's most well known ideas in the philosophy of history and aesthetics. It was not, however, the exclusive source of those ideas, and indeed they had philosophical expression elsewhere. One may view his contemplations, then, as work in progress. For example, the logic of question and answer promoted by the Memorial was also prompted by Collingwood's reading of Bacon and Descartes. This was a reflect…Read more
    The argument of this article is that the Albert Memorial acted as a catalyst for some of Collingwood's most well known ideas in the philosophy of history and aesthetics. It was not, however, the exclusive source of those ideas, and indeed they had philosophical expression elsewhere. One may view his contemplations, then, as work in progress. For example, the logic of question and answer promoted by the Memorial was also prompted by Collingwood's reading of Bacon and Descartes. This was a reflection of his determination to depart from the realism of his philosophical teachers. Similarly, the Memorial directs Collingwood's thought forward. The Memorial acts as a facilitator of his thought on history, which in the course of its formulation undergoes many transformations. The logic of question and answer also finds a place in Collingwood's early thinking about art, but even here it is in the process of constant transition. Collingwood's reaction to the Memorial helps us to conclude that there is nothing ironic about the fact that Collingwood loathed the structure that was also the instigator of one of his most influential philosophical doctrines
    R. G. Collingwood
  •  47
    Review of Fred Inglis, History Man: The Life of R. G. Collingwood (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (10). 2009.
    R. G. Collingwood
  • An antidote to illusory inferences
    with M. R. Newsome
    In Morton Ann Gernsbacher & Sharon J. Derry (eds.), Proceedings of the 20th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, Lawerence Erlbaum. pp. 820. 1998.
    Reasoning
  •  19
    Models, Causation, and Explanation
    In A. J. Sanford & P. N. Johnson-Laird (eds.), The nature and limits of human understanding, T & T Clark. 2003.
    Causal ExplanationExplanation in Cognitive ScienceExplanation and UnderstandingModels and Explanatio…Read more
    Causal ExplanationExplanation in Cognitive ScienceExplanation and UnderstandingModels and Explanation
  • Illusions of understanding
    In A. J. Sanford & P. N. Johnson-Laird (eds.), The nature and limits of human understanding, T & T Clark. pp. 3--25. 2003.
    Aspects of Consciousness
  • The psychology of understanding
    In A. J. Sanford & P. N. Johnson-Laird (eds.), The nature and limits of human understanding, T & T Clark. 2003.
    The Nature of Folk Psychology
  •  96
    Review of R.G. Collingwood, An Essay on Philosophical Method; the Philosophy of Enchantment, Studies in Folktale, Cultural Criticism, and Anthropology (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (5). 2006.
    R. G. Collingwood
  •  80
    Models of Possibilities Instead of Logic as the Basis of Human Reasoning
    with Ruth M. J. Byrne and Sangeet S. Khemlani
    Minds and Machines 34 (3): 1-22. 2024.
    The theory of mental models and its computer implementations have led to crucial experiments showing that no standard logic—the sentential calculus and all logics that include it—can underlie human reasoning. The theory replaces the logical concept of validity (the conclusion is true in all cases in which the premises are true) with necessity (conclusions describe no more than possibilities to which the premises refer). Many inferences are both necessary and valid. But experiments show that indi…Read more
    The theory of mental models and its computer implementations have led to crucial experiments showing that no standard logic—the sentential calculus and all logics that include it—can underlie human reasoning. The theory replaces the logical concept of validity (the conclusion is true in all cases in which the premises are true) with necessity (conclusions describe no more than possibilities to which the premises refer). Many inferences are both necessary and valid. But experiments show that individuals make necessary inferences that are invalid, e.g., Few people ate steak or sole; therefore, few people ate steak. Other crucial experiments show that individuals reject inferences that are not necessary but valid, e.g., He had the anesthetic or felt pain, but not both; therefore, he had the anesthetic or felt pain, or both. Nothing in logic can justify the rejection of a valid inference: a denial of its conclusion is inconsistent with its premises, and inconsistencies yield valid inferences of any conclusions whatsoever including the one denied. So inconsistencies are catastrophic in logic. In contrast, the model theory treats all inferences as defeasible (nonmonotonic), and inconsistencies have the null model, which yields only the null model in conjunction with any other premises. So inconsistences are local. Which allows truth values in natural languages to be much richer than those that occur in the semantics of standard logics; and individuals verify assertions on the basis of both facts and possibilities that did not occur.
    Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence
  •  2
    Toward a Unified Theory of Reasoning
    with Sangeet S. Khemlani
    The Psychology of Learning and Motivation. 2013.
  •  1
    How we reason: a view from psychology
    The Reasoner 2 4-5. 2008.
    Good reasoning can lead to success; bad reasoning can lead to catastrophe. Yet it's not obvious how we reason, and why we make mistakes. This book by one of the pioneers of the field, Philip Johnson-Laird, looks at the mental processes that underlie our reasoning. It provides the most accessible account yet of the science of reasoning
    Moral Psychology, Misc
  •  4
    Mental Models in Prepositional Reasoning
    with B. C. Bara and V. Lombarde
    In Ashwin Ram & Kurt Eiselt (eds.), Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society: August 13 to 16, 1994, Georgia Institute of Technology, Erlbaum. pp. 16--15. 1994.
    Deductive ReasoningVarieties of Representation
  •  100
    Will there be any neat solutions to small problems in cognitive science?
    Cognitive Science 3 (2): 173-176. 1979.
    Cognitive Sciences
  •  134
    Mental models in cognitive science
    Cognitive Science 4 (1): 71-115. 1980.
    Cognitive Sciences
  •  93
    The nature and limits of human understanding (edited book)
    with A. J. Sanford
    T & T Clark. 2003.
    This book is an exploration of human understanding, from the perspectives of psychology, philosophy, biology and theology. The six contributors are among the most internationally eminent in their fields. Though scholarly, the writing is non-technical. No background in psychology, philosophy or theology is presumed. No other interdisciplinary work has undertaken to explore the nature of human understanding. This book is unique, and highly significant for anyone interested in or concerned about th…Read more
    This book is an exploration of human understanding, from the perspectives of psychology, philosophy, biology and theology. The six contributors are among the most internationally eminent in their fields. Though scholarly, the writing is non-technical. No background in psychology, philosophy or theology is presumed. No other interdisciplinary work has undertaken to explore the nature of human understanding. This book is unique, and highly significant for anyone interested in or concerned about the human condition
    Epistemology, General WorksHuman Nature
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