Dear Dr. Qwerty,
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BBS MULTIPLE BOOK REVIEW -- CALL RESPONSE INSTRUCTIONS
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Please DO NOT respond to this email. If you wish to submit a proposal for
commentary and/or suggest potential commentators, please go to the new
Online Commentary Proposal System at the following URL:
http://www.bbsonline.org/perl/commentary/commproposal?authordir=Oaksford-03…
* If you only wish to suggest potential commentators, please ignore prompts to
submit a proposal with expertise information.
* If you experience technical difficulties, please email bbs(a)bbsonline.org.
* Please respond to this Call no later than April 11, 2008
NOTE: Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS) is an international, interdisciplinary
journal providing Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current
research in the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences. Commentators must be BBS
Associates, or suggested by a BBS Associate. If you are not a BBS Associate, please
follow the instructions linked below:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/associnst.html
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** Multiple Book Review Information **
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Below is a link to the forthcoming précis of a book accepted for Multiple Book Review
in Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS). Please note that it is the *BOOK*, not the
precis, that is to be reviewed.
BOOK: Bayesian Rationality: The Probabilistic Approach to Human Reasoning
PUBLISHER: Oxford University Press, 2007
AUTHORS: Mike Oaksford and Nick Chater
ABSTRACT: According to Aristotle humans are the rational animal. The borderline between
rationality and
irrationality is fundamental to many aspects of human life including the law, mental
health, and language
interpretation. But what is it to be rational? One answer, deeply embedded in the Western
intellectual
tradition since ancient Greece, is that rationality concerns reasoning according to the
rules of logicthe
formal theory that specifies the inferential connections that hold with certainty between
propositions.
Piaget viewed logical reasoning as defining the end-point of cognitive development; and
contemporary
psychology of reasoning has focussed on comparing human reasoning against logical
standards.
Bayesian Rationality argues that rationality is defined instead by the ability to reason
about uncertainty.
While people are typically poor at numerical reasoning about probability, human thought is
sensitive to
subtle patterns of qualitative Bayesian, probabilistic reasoning. In Chapter 14 of
Bayesian Rationality,
the case is made that cognition in general, and human everyday reasoning in particular, is
best viewed as
solving probabilistic, rather than logical, inference problems. In chapters 57 the
psychology of
deductive reasoning is tackled head-on: it is argued that purportedly logical
reasoning problems,
revealing apparently irrational behaviour, are better understood from a probabilistic
point of view. Data
from conditional reasoning, Wasons selection task, and syllogistic inference are captured
by recasting
these problems probabilistically. The probabilistic approach makes a variety of novel
predictions which
have been experimentally confirmed. The book considers the implications of this work, and
the wider
probabilistic turn in cognitive science and artificial intelligence, for understanding
human rationality.
Keywords: Reasoning, rationality, logic, probability, Bayes theorem, rational analysis,
selection task,
syllogisms, conditional inference, non-monotonic reasoning
PRECIS:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Preprints/Oaksford-03132008/Referees/
==================================================================
BBS MULTIPLE BOOK REVIEW -- CALL RESPONSE INSTRUCTIONS
==================================================================
Please DO NOT respond to this email. If you wish to submit a proposal for
commentary and/or suggest potential commentators, please go to the new
Online Commentary Proposal System at the following URL:
http://www.bbsonline.org/perl/commentary/commproposal?authordir=Oaksford-03…
* If you only wish to suggest potential commentators, please ignore prompts to
submit a proposal with expertise information.
* If you experience technical difficulties, please email bbs(a)bbsonline.org.
* Please respond to this Call no later than April 11, 2008
NOTE: Behavioral and Brain Sciences (BBS) is an international, interdisciplinary
journal providing Open Peer Commentary on important and controversial current
research in the biobehavioral and cognitive sciences. Commentators must be BBS
Associates, or suggested by a BBS Associate. If you are not a BBS Associate, please
follow the instructions linked below:
http://www.bbsonline.org/Instructions/associnst.html
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Barbara Finlay - Editor
Paul Bloom - Editor
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
bbs(a)bbsonline.org
http://www.bbsonline.org
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