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Full Description
Philosophers have always recognized the value of reason, but the process of reasoning itself has only recently begun to emerge as a philosophical topic in its own right. Is reasoning a distinctive kind of mental process? If so, what is its nature? How does reasoning differ from merely freely associating thoughts? What is the relationship between reasoning about what to believe and reasoning about how to act? Is reasoning itself something you do, or something that happens to you? And what is the value of reasoning? Are there rules for good or correct reasoning and, if so, what are they like? Does good reasoning always lead to justified belief or rational action? Is there more than one way to reason correctly from your evidence? This volume comprises twelve new essays by leading researchers in the philosophy of reasoning that together address these questions and many more, and explore the connections between them.
Contents
1: Introduction
Part I: The Nature of Reasoning
Reasoning as a Mental Process
2: Susanna Siegel: Inference without Reckoning
3: John Broome: A Linking Belief is Not Essential for Reasoning
4: Julia Staffel: Attitudes in Active Reasoning
Reasoning and Agency
5: Nicholas Southwood: The Question of Practical Reason
5: Mark Richard: Is Reasoning a Form of Agency?
7: Paul Boghossian: Inference, Agency and Responsibility
Part II: The Value of Reasoning
Rules for Reasoning
8: Alex Worsnip: Isolating Correct Reasoning
9: Joshua Schechter: Small Steps and Great Leaps in Thought: The Epistemology of Basic Deductive Rules
10: Magdalena Balcerak Jackson and Brendan Balcerak Jackson: With Power Comes Responsibility: Cognitive Capacities and Rational Requirements
Reasoning and Reasons
11: Michael G. Titelbaum and Matthew Kopec: When Rational Reasoners Reason Differently
12: Lisa Bortolotti, Magdalena Antrobus, and Ema Sullivan-Bissett: The Epistemic Innocence of Optimistically Biased Beliefs
13: Matthew Noah Smith: Sovereign Agency