2 research outputs found

    Natural Language and Everyday Reasoning

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    How We Naturally Reason

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    In the 17th century, Hobbes stated that we reason by addition and subtraction. Historians of logic note that Hobbes thought of reasoning as ā€œa ā€˜species of computationā€™ā€ but point out that ā€œhis writing contains in fact no attempt to work out such a project.ā€ Though Leibniz mentions the plus/minus character of the positive and negative copulas, neither he nor Hobbes say anything about a plus/minus character of other common logical words that drive our deductive judgments, words like ā€˜someā€™, ā€˜allā€™, ā€˜ifā€™, and ā€˜andā€™, each of which actually turns out to have an oppositive, character that allows us, ā€œin our silent reasoning,ā€ to ignore its literal meaning and to reckon with it as one reckons with a plus or a minus operator in elementary algebra or arithmetic. These ā€˜logical constantsā€™ of natural language figure crucially in our everyday reasoning. Because Hobbes and Leibniz did not identify them as the plus and minus words we reason with, their insight into what goes on in ā€˜ratiocinationā€™ did not provide a guide for a research program that could develop a +/- logic that actually describes how we reason deductively. I will argue that such a +/- logic provides a way back from modern predicate logicā€”the logic of quantifiers and bound variables that is now ā€˜standard logicā€™ā€”to an Aristotelian term logic of natural language that had been the millennial standard logic
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