Cognitive Architectures, Kinds, and Belief

In Eric Schwitzgebel & Jonathan Jong (eds.), The Nature of Belief. Oxford University Press (forthcoming)
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Abstract

To take an empirical approach toward belief, I suggest thinking of belief as a putative kind within the domain of cognitive science. Adopting realist, naturalist, and non-reductionist account of kinds according to which kinds are clusters of causal properties, I argue that a plausible place to begin an inquiry on belief is the architecture of human reasoning. I offer the Sound Board Account of Human Reasoning (S-BAR) (in contrast to Dual Process Theory), according to which there is one reasoning system, which can operate consciously or unconsciously, automatically or controlled, concretely or abstractly, and inductively or deductively. I then argue that, on this architecture, belief will have two properties: inferential promiscuity and settling state. In the final section, I argue that wishful thinkings are beliefs, acceptance and belief are distinct, and argue for a disambiguation of implicit measures.

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Joshua Mugg
Park University

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