Thinking about possibilities: mechanisms, ontogeny, functions and phylogeny

Author:

Redshaw Jonathan1ORCID,Ganea Patricia A.2

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Australia

2. Department of Applied Psychology and Human Development, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada M5S 1V6

Abstract

Humans possess the remarkable capacity to imagine possible worlds and to demarcate possibilities and impossibilities in reasoning. We can think about what might happen in the future and consider what the present would look like had the past turned out differently. We reason about cause and effect, weigh up alternative courses of action and regret our mistakes. In this theme issue, leading experts from across the life sciences provide ground-breaking insights into the proximate questions of how thinking about possibilities works and develops, and the ultimate questions of its adaptive functions and evolutionary history. Together, the contributions delineate neurophysiological, cognitive and social mechanisms involved in mentally simulating possible states of reality; and point to conceptual changes in the understanding of singular and multiple possibilities during human development. The contributions also demonstrate how thinking about possibilities can augment learning, decision-making and judgement, and highlight aspects of the capacity that appear to be shared with non-human animals and aspects that may be uniquely human. Throughout the issue, it becomes clear that many developmental milestones achieved during childhood, and many of the most significant evolutionary and cultural triumphs of the human species, can only be understood with reference to increasingly complex reasoning about possibilities. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Thinking about possibilities: mechanisms, ontogeny, functions and phylogeny’.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference124 articles.

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3. Lewis D. 1986 On the plurality of worlds. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell.

4. Semantical considerations on modal logic;Kripke SA;Acta Philos. Fennica,1963

5. Leibniz GW. 1710/1951 Theodicy: essays on the goodness of God, the freedom of man and the origin of evil. London, UK: Routledge & Kegan Paul Limited.

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