Librería Portfolio Librería Portfolio

Búsqueda avanzada

TIENE EN SU CESTA DE LA COMPRA

0 productos

en total 0,00 €

PATTERNS OF RATIONALITY. RECURRING INFERENCES IN SCIENCE, SOCIAL COGNITION AND RELIGIOUS THINKING
Título:
PATTERNS OF RATIONALITY. RECURRING INFERENCES IN SCIENCE, SOCIAL COGNITION AND RELIGIOUS THINKING
Subtítulo:
Autor:
BERTOLOTTI, T
Editorial:
SPRINGER VERLAG
Año de edición:
2015
ISBN:
978-3-319-17785-4
Páginas:
278
118,00 €

 

Sinopsis

Provides readers with a detailed and realistic picture of cognition and rationality
Develops a new epistemological framework for analyzing scientific modeling, social cognition and religious thought
Adopts a trans-disciplinary perspective, covering biological research and philosophy, technology and ethics and evolutionary and cognitive studies



This book proposes an applied epistemological framework for investigating science, social cognition and religious thinking based on inferential patterns that recur in the different domains. It presents human rationality as a tool that allows us to make sense of our (physical or social) surroundings. It shows that the resulting cognitive activity produces a broad spectrum of outputs, such as scientific models and experimentation, gossip and social networks, but also ancient and contemporary deities. The book consists of three parts, the first of which addresses scientific modeling and experimentation, and their application to the analysis of scientific rationality. Thus, this part continues the tradition of eco-cognitive epistemology and abduction studies. The second part deals with the relationship between social cognition and cognitive niche construction, i.e. the evolutionarily relevant externalization of knowledge onto the environment, while the third part focuses on what is commonly defined as "irrationalö, thus being in a way dialectically opposed to the first part. Here, the author demonstrates that the "irrationalö can be analyzed by applying the same epistemological approach used to study scientific rationality and social cognition; also in this case, we see the emergence of patterns of rationality that regulate the relationships between agents and their environment. All in all, the book offers a coherent and unitary account of human rationality, providing a basis for new conceptual connections and theoretical speculations.