The Dialogical Roots of Deduction: Historical, Cognitive, and Philosophical Perspectives on Reasoning

The Dialogical Roots of Deduction: Historical, Cognitive, and Philosophical Perspectives on Reasoning

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  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-09-15 16:17:36
  • Update Date:2025-09-24
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Catarina Dutilh Novaes
  • ISBN:1108790925
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

This comprehensive account of the concept and practices of deduction is the first to bring together perspectives from philosophy, history, psychology and cognitive science, and mathematical practice。 Catarina Dutilh Novaes draws on all of these perspectives to argue for an overarching conceptualization of deduction as a dialogical practice: deduction has dialogical roots, and these dialogical roots are still largely present both in theories and in practices of deduction。 Dutilh Novaes' account also highlights the deeply human and in fact social nature of deduction, as embedded in actual human practices; as such, it presents a highly innovative account of deduction。 The book will be of interest to a wide range of readers, from advanced students to senior scholars, and from philosophers to mathematicians and cognitive scientists。

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Reviews

Joel David Hamkins

In this insightful and remarkable work, Professor Novaes defends and explores at length the philosophical thesis that mathematical proof and deduction generally has a fundamentally dialogical nature, proceeding in a back-and-forth dialogue between two semi-adversarial but collaborative actors, the Prover and the Skeptic, who together aim to find mathematical insight。 This view of proof-as-dialogue, she argues, carries explanatory power for the philosophy of mathematical practice, explaining dive In this insightful and remarkable work, Professor Novaes defends and explores at length the philosophical thesis that mathematical proof and deduction generally has a fundamentally dialogical nature, proceeding in a back-and-forth dialogue between two semi-adversarial but collaborative actors, the Prover and the Skeptic, who together aim to find mathematical insight。 This view of proof-as-dialogue, she argues, carries explanatory power for the philosophy of mathematical practice, explaining diverse aspects of proof-writing, refereeing, and more, including the multifaceted roles of proof, including proof as verification, proof as certification, proof for communication and persuasion, proof as explanation, and proof as a driver of mathematical innovation。In extensive, refined scholarly work, Novaes explores the historical and intellectual roots of the dialogical perspective on deduction, tracing the idea from ancient times through medieval philosophy and into the present day, including case studies of current mathematical developments, such as Mochizuki’s claimed proof of the abc conjecture, as well as recent psychological experiments on the role of group reasoning in resolving certain well-known disappointing failures of rationality, such as in the Wason card experiment。 Truly fascinating。On the basis of her work, I have nominated Novaes for the Lakatos Award (given annually "for an outstanding contribution to the philosophy of science, widely interpreted, in the form of a book published in English during the current year or the previous five years")。 Lakatos himself, of course, was a friend of dialogical mathematics—his famous Proofs and Refutations proceeds after all in a dialogue between mathematicians of different philosophical outlooks。 Novaes engages with Lakatos’s work explicitly, pointing out the obvious parallels, but also highlighting important differences between her Prover/Skeptic dialogical account and the kind of proof dialogues appearing in Proofs and Refutations。 In light of this connection with Lakatos, I would find it especially fitting for Novaes to win the Lakatos Award。 。。。more