posted on 2015-06-23, 09:24authored byD. Aerts, Sandro Sozzo, T. Veloz
Traditional cognitive science rests on a foundation of classical logic and probability theory. This foundation has been seriously challenged by several findings in experimental psychology on human decision making. Meanwhile, the formalism of quantum theory has provided an efficient resource for modeling these classically problematical situations. In this paper, we start from our successful quantum-theoretic approach to the modeling of concept combinations to formulate a unifying explanatory hypothesis. In it, human reasoning is the superposition of two processes -- a conceptual reasoning, whose nature is emergence of new conceptuality, and a logical reasoning, founded on an algebraic calculus of the logical type. In most cognitive processes however, the former reasoning prevails over the latter. In this perspective, the observed deviations from classical logical reasoning should not be interpreted as biases but, rather, as natural expressions of emergence in its deepest form.
History
Citation
International Journal of Theoretical Physics June 2015
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SOCIAL SCIENCE/School of Management
Version
AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Published in
International Journal of Theoretical Physics June 2015