Affiliation:
1. Russian State University for the Humanities
2. National Research University Higher School of Economics
3. Hong Kong Baptist University
4. Tallinn University of Technology
Abstract
Abstract
Mercier and Sperber (MS) have ventured to undermine an age-old assumption in logic, namely the presence of
premise-conclusion structures, in favor of two novel claims: that reasoning is an evolutionary product of a reason-intuiting
module in the mind, and that theories of logic teach next to nothing about the mechanisms of how inferences are drawn in that
module. The present paper begs to differ: logic is indispensable in formulating conceptions of cognitive elements of reasoning,
and MS is no less exempt from taking notice of premise-conclusion structures than the commonplace theories of reasoning are. Our
counterclaim is realized in terms of diagrammatic reasoning dating back to Charles Peirce’s pragmaticism. The upshot is that
pragmatist logic restores the premise-conclusion structures in argumentation, supplants reason-intuition module with logical
content, and validates good reasoning as an indispensable resource evident to all rational minds that claim ownership of reason
and understanding.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Behavioral Neuroscience,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,General Computer Science