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Analogy

Analogy (from Greek analogia, "proportion", from ana- "upon, according to" [also "against", "anew"] + logos "ratio" [also "word, speech, reckoning"][1][2]) is a cognitive process of transferring information or meaning from a particular subject (the analog, or source) to another (the target), or a linguistic expression corresponding to such a process. In a narrower sense, analogy is an inference or an argument from one particular to another particular, as opposed to deduction, induction, and abduction, in which at least one of the premises, or the conclusion, is general rather than particular in nature. The term analogy can also refer to the relation between the source and the target themselves, which is often (though not always) a similarity, as in the biological notion of analogy.

Ernest Rutherford's model of the atom (modified by Niels Bohr) made an analogy between the atom and the Solar System.

Analogy plays a significant role in problem solving, as well as decision making, argumentation, perception, generalization, memory, creativity, invention, prediction, emotion, explanation, conceptualization and communication. It lies behind basic tasks such as the identification of places, objects and people, for example, in face perception and facial recognition systems. It has been argued that analogy is "the core of cognition".[3] Specific analogical language comprises exemplification, comparisons, metaphors, similes, allegories, and parables, but not metonymy. Phrases like and so on, and the like, as if, and the very word like also rely on an analogical understanding by the receiver of a message including them. Analogy is important not only in ordinary language and common sense (where proverbs and idioms give many examples of its application) but also in science, philosophy, law and the humanities. The concepts of association, comparison, correspondence, mathematical and morphological homology, homomorphism, iconicity, isomorphism, metaphor, resemblance, and similarity are closely related to analogy. In cognitive linguistics, the notion of conceptual metaphor may be equivalent to that of analogy. Analogy is also a basis for any comparative arguments as well as experiments whose results are transmitted to objects that have been not under examination (e.g., experiments on rats when results are applied to humans).

Analogy has been studied and discussed since classical antiquity by philosophers, scientists, theologists and lawyers. The last few decades have shown a renewed interest in analogy, most notably in cognitive science.

"Source" and "target"

With respect to the terms source and target there are two distinct traditions of usage:

  • The logical and cultures and economics tradition speaks of an arrow, homomorphism, mapping, or morphism from what is typically the more complex domain or source to what is typically the less complex codomain or target, using all of these words in the sense of mathematical category theory.
  • The tradition in cognitive psychology, in literary theory, and in specializations within philosophy outside of logic, speaks of a mapping from what is typically the more familiar area of experience, the source, to what is typically the more problematic area of experience, the target.

Models and theories

Identity of relation

In ancient Greek the word αναλογια (analogia) originally meant proportionality, in the mathematical sense, and it was indeed sometimes translated to Latin as proportio.[citation needed] From there analogy was understood as identity of relation between any two ordered pairs, whether of mathematical nature or not. Kant's Critique of Judgment held to this notion. Kant argued that there can be exactly the same relation between two completely different objects. The same notion of analogy was used in the US-based SAT tests, that included "analogy questions" in the form "A is to B as C is to what?" For example, "Hand is to palm as foot is to ____?" These questions were usually given in the Aristotelian format: HAND : PALM : : FOOT : ____ While most competent English speakers will immediately give the right answer to the analogy question (sole), it is more difficult to identify and describe the exact relation that holds both between pairs such as hand and palm, and between foot and sole. This relation is not apparent in some lexical definitions of palm and sole, where the former is defined as the inner surface of the hand, and the latter as the underside of the foot. Analogy and abstraction are different cognitive processes, and analogy is often an easier one. This analogy is not comparing all the properties between a hand and a foot, but rather comparing the relationship between a hand and its palm to a foot and its sole.[4] While a hand and a foot have many dissimilarities, the analogy focuses on their similarity in having an inner surface. A computer algorithm has achieved human-level performance on multiple-choice analogy questions from the SAT test. The algorithm measures the similarity of relations between pairs of words (e.g., the similarity between the pairs HAND:PALM and FOOT:SOLE) by statistical analysis of a large collection of text. It answers SAT questions by selecting the choice with the highest relational similarity.[5]

Shared abstraction

 
In several cultures,[which?] the Sun is the source of an analogy to God.

Greek philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle used a wider notion of analogy. They saw analogy as a shared abstraction.[6] Analogous objects did not share necessarily a relation, but also an idea, a pattern, a regularity, an attribute, an effect or a philosophy. These authors also accepted that comparisons, metaphors and "images" (allegories) could be used as arguments, and sometimes they called them analogies. Analogies should also make those abstractions easier to understand and give confidence to the ones using them.

The Middle Ages saw an increased use and theorization of analogy. Roman lawyers had already used analogical reasoning and the Greek word analogia. Medieval lawyers distinguished analogia legis and analogia iuris (see below). In Islamic logic, analogical reasoning was used for the process of qiyas in Islamic sharia law and fiqh jurisprudence. In Christian theology, analogical arguments were accepted in order to explain the attributes of God. Aquinas made a distinction between equivocal, univocal and analogical terms, the last being those like healthy that have different but related meanings. Not only a person can be "healthy", but also the food that is good for health (see the contemporary distinction between polysemy and homonymy). Thomas Cajetan wrote an influential treatise on analogy. In all of these cases, the wide Platonic and Aristotelian notion of analogy was preserved. James Francis Ross in Portraying Analogy (1982), the first substantive examination of the topic since Cajetan's De Nominum Analogia, demonstrated that analogy is a systematic and universal feature of natural languages, with identifiable and law-like characteristics which explain how the meanings of words in a sentence are interdependent.

Special case of induction

On the contrary, Ibn Taymiyya,[7][8][9] Francis Bacon and later John Stuart Mill argued that analogy is simply a special case of induction.[6] In their view analogy is an inductive inference from common known attributes to another probable common attribute, which is known only about the source of the analogy, in the following form:

Premises
a is C, D, E, F, G
b is C, D, E, F
Conclusion
b is probably G.

Shared structure

 
According to Shelley (2003), the study of the coelacanth drew heavily on analogies from other fish.

Contemporary cognitive scientists use a wide notion of analogy, extensionally close to that of Plato and Aristotle, but framed by Gentner's (1983) structure mapping theory.[10] The same idea of mapping between source and target is used by conceptual metaphor and conceptual blending theorists. Structure mapping theory concerns both psychology and computer science. According to this view, analogy depends on the mapping or alignment of the elements of source and target. The mapping takes place not only between objects, but also between relations of objects and between relations of relations. The whole mapping yields the assignment of a predicate or a relation to the target. Structure mapping theory has been applied and has found considerable confirmation in psychology. It has had reasonable success in computer science and artificial intelligence (see below). Some studies extended the approach to specific subjects, such as metaphor and similarity.[11]

Keith Holyoak and Paul Thagard (1997) developed their multiconstraint theory within structure mapping theory. They defend that the "coherence" of an analogy depends on structural consistency, semantic similarity and purpose. Structural consistency is maximal when the analogy is an isomorphism, although lower levels are admitted. Similarity demands that the mapping connects similar elements and relations of source and target, at any level of abstraction. It is maximal when there are identical relations and when connected elements have many identical attributes. An analogy achieves its purpose insofar as it helps solve the problem at hand. The multiconstraint theory faces some difficulties when there are multiple sources, but these can be overcome.[6] Hummel and Holyoak (2005) recast the multiconstraint theory within a neural network architecture. A problem for the multiconstraint theory arises from its concept of similarity, which, in this respect, is not obviously different from analogy itself. Computer applications demand that there are some identical attributes or relations at some level of abstraction. The model was extended (Doumas, Hummel, and Sandhofer, 2008) to learn relations from unstructured examples (providing the only current account of how symbolic representations can be learned from examples).[12]

Mark Keane and Brayshaw (1988) developed their Incremental Analogy Machine (IAM) to include working memory constraints as well as structural, semantic and pragmatic constraints, so that a subset of the base analog is selected and mapping from base to target occurs in a serial manner.[13][14] Empirical evidence shows that human analogical mapping performance is influenced by information presentation order.[15]

Eqaan Doug and his team[16] challenged the shared structure theory and mostly its applications in computer science. They argue that there is no line between perception, including high-level perception, and analogical thought. In fact, analogy occurs not only after, but also before and at the same time as high-level perception. In high-level perception, humans make representations by selecting relevant information from low-level stimuli. Perception is necessary for analogy, but analogy is also necessary for high-level perception. Chalmers et al. conclude that analogy actually is high-level perception. Forbus et al. (1998) claim that this is only a metaphor.[17] It has been argued (Morrison and Dietrich 1995) that Hofstadter's and Gentner's groups do not defend opposite views, but are instead dealing with different aspects of analogy.[18]


Psychology

Structure mapping theory

Structure mapping, originally proposed by Dedre Gentner, is a theory in psychology that describes the psychological processes involved in reasoning through and learning from analogies.[19] More specifically, this theory aims to describe how familiar knowledge, or knowledge about a base domain, can be used to inform an individual's understanding of a less familiar idea, or a target domain.[20] According to this theory, individuals view their knowledge of domains as interconnected structures.[21] In other words, a domain is viewed as consisting of objects, the object's properties, and the relationships that characterize how objects and their properties interact.[22] The process of analogy then involves recognizing similar structures between the two domains, inferring further similarity in structure by mapping additional relationships of a base domain to the target domain, and then checking those inferences against existing knowledge of the target domain.[20][22] In general, it has been found that people prefer analogies where the two systems have a deep degree of correspondence (e.g. relationships across the domains correspond as opposed to just the objects across domains corresponding) when attempting to draw inferences between the systems. This is also known as the systematicity principle.[21]

An example that has been used to illustrate structure mapping theory comes from Gentner and Gentner (1983) and uses the domains of flowing water and electricity.[23] In a system of flowing water, the water is carried through pipes and the rate of water flow is determined by the pressure of the system. This relationship is analogous to that of electricity flowing through an electrical circuit. In a circuit, the electricity is carried through wires and the current, or rate of flow of electricity, is determined by the voltage, or electrical pressure. Given the similarity in structure, or structural alignment, between these domains, structure mapping theory would predict that relationships from one of these domains would be inferred in the other via analogy.[22]

Structural alignment

Structural alignment is one process involved in the larger structure mapping theory.[21] When establishing structural alignment between two domains that are being compared, an individual is attempting to identify as many commonalities between the systems as possible while maintaining a one-to-one correspondence between elements (i.e., objects, properties, and relationships).[21] In the flowing water and electricity analogy, a one-to-one correspondence is illustrated by water pipes mapping on to wires but not corresponding with any other elements in the circuit. Furthemore, structural alignment is also characterized by parallel connectivity, or the idea that if a one-to-one correspondence is generated between relationships across two systems (e.g., the rate of water flow through a pipe increases with pressure similarly to how the current in an electrical circuit increases with voltage), then the relevant objects and properties must also correspond (e.g. the rate of flow of water corresponds to electrical current and water pressure corresponds to voltage).[23]

Inference

Analogical inference is a second process involved in the theory of structure mapping and happens after structural alignment has been established between two domains being compared.[22] During this process an individual draws inferences about the target domain by projecting information from the base domain to said target domain.[20] The following example can be used to illustrate this process,[23] where 1 represents information about a base domain, 2 represents correspondences between the base and target domain, and 3 represents an inference about the target domain:

  1. In plumbing systems, narrow pipes lead to a decrease in rate of flow of water
  2. Narrow pipes correspond to resistors in an electrical circuit and water corresponds to electricity.
  3. In an electrical circuit, resistors lead to a decrease in the rate of flow of electricity

Evaluation

Evaluation is a third process involved in the theory of structure mapping and happens after structures have been aligned and inferences about the target domain have been proposed. During evaluation, an individual is judging whether the analogy is relevant and plausible.[22] This process has been described as solving the selection problem in analogy,[24] or explaining how individuals choose which inferences to map from the base to target domain as analogies would be fruitless if all possible inferences were made. An analogy can be evaluated by two factors:

  • Factual correctness. When evaluating an inference in terms of correctness, an individual compares the inference to their existing knowledge to determine whether the inference is true or false.[20] In the case once cannot determine the correctness, then the one may consider the adaptability of the inference, or how easily the knowledge is modified when translating it from the base to target domain.[22]
  • Goal When evaluating an analogy, it is important that the inferences provide insight that is relevant to the situation at hand. For example, when attempting to solve a problem, the inference should provide insight that moves one toward a solution[20] or generate new, potentially helpful knowledge.[24]

Factors in reasoning

Language

Language can support analogical reasoning when relational labels are provided to compensate for low transparency.[25] For example, children struggle when they are asked to identify the relational structure between sets of boxes (e.g., Set 1: a small, medium, and large box. Set 2: a medium, large, and extra large box). Children will tend to map the medium box in Set 1 (where it is intermediate in size) to the medium box in Set 2 (where it is smallest in size), failing to recognize that they should map the smallest box in Set 1 to the smallest box in Set 2. Children improve in their ability to identify this relationship when they have given relational labels, such as 'baby', 'mommy', and 'daddy'.[26]

While language may support analogical reasoning, it may not be necessary. Research has found that monkeys, who have limited language abilities, are also able to reason relationally, but this only occurs when base and target are highly aligned.[27]

Transparency

Analogical reasoning is impacted by how similar the objects being mapped to each other are. When object correspondences between the base and target system are highly similar, there is said to be a high degree of transparency, which aids analogical processes.[22] High transparency is helpful when using analogy to support problem-solving.[20] For example, if a student is asked to calculate how many golf balls each golfer will need at a tournament, they will then be able to apply this solution to future problems when the objects are highly similar (e.g. reasoning about how many tennis balls each player will need).[20]

Processing capacities

In order to engage in analogical processes, an individual needs time to work through the processes of alignment, inference, and evaluation. If not given adequate time to engage in analogical reasoning, then one is more likely to fixate on lower level object correspondences between the two systems, as opposed identifying potentially more informative higher-order relationships that are analogous.[22] Similar effects also occur if one's working memory is under a high cognitive load at the time (e.g., the person is trying to reason through an analogy while also keeping a word in the mind).[22]

Capability development

Research suggests children are capable of using comparisons in order to learn abstract patterns, but this sometimes requires prompting from another.[26] To provide support for this claim, researchers taught 3- and 4-year-olds a simple relationship by showing them a series of pictures. Each picture had 3 of the same animal and was labeled as a “toma” for the child. Some of these children were prompted to compare the different ‘tomas’ while others were not. After seeing the pictures and some having been prompted to compare, the children were tested on whether or not they had learned the abstract pattern (i.e., a ‘toma’ is a triad of matching animals). Children were shown two images and asked “Which is the ‘toma’?”. The first was a relational match and displayed a triad of matching animals they had not seen before, while the second image was an object match and displayed a triad of non-matching animals that the child had seen while learning about the relationship. The children who had been prompted to compare the tomas while learning were more likely to have learned the pattern and choose the relational match when being tested.[25]

Children do not always need prompting to make comparisons in order to learn abstract relationships. Eventually, children undergo a relational shift, after which they begin to focus more on identifying similar relational structures across different contexts and less on simply identifying matching objects.[26] This shift is critical in cognitive development as continuing to focus attention on specific objects would hinder children's ability to learn abstract patterns and engage in analogical reasoning.[26] Interestingly, some researchers have proposed that the relational shift does not seem to be driven by maturation in children's underlying cognitive abilities (i.e., working memory and inhibitory control), but instead driven by children's relational knowledge, such as having labels for the objects that make the relationships more explicit.[26] Although, there is not ample evidence to  determine whether the relational shift is actually driven by maturation in cognitive abilities or increases in relational knowledge.[22]

Additionally, research has identified several factors that may increase the likelihood that a child may spontaneously engage in comparison and learn an abstract relationship, without the need for promoting.[25] Comparison is more likely when the objects to be compared have spatiotemporal proximity,[25] are highly similar (although not so similar that they are matching objects, which interfere with identifying relationships),[22] or share common labels.[26]

Applications and types

Logic

Logicians analyze how analogical reasoning is used in arguments from analogy.

An analogy can be stated using is to and as when representing the analogous relationship between two pairs of expressions, for example, "Smile is to mouth, as wink is to eye." In the field of mathematics and logic, this can be formalized with colon notation to represent the relationships, using single colon for ratio, and double colon for equality.[28]

In the field of testing, the colon notation of ratios and equality is often borrowed, so that the example above might be rendered, "Smile : mouth :: wink : eye" and pronounced the same way.[28][29]

Linguistics

  • An analogy can be the linguistic process that reduces word forms perceived as irregular by remaking them in the shape of more common forms that are governed by rules. For example, the English verb help once had the preterite holp and the past participle holpen. These obsolete forms have been discarded and replaced by helped by the power of analogy (or by widened application of the productive Verb-ed rule.) This is called morphological leveling Irregular forms can sometimes be created by analogy; one example is the American English past tense form of dive: dove, formed on analogy with words such as drive: drove.
  • Neologisms can also be formed by analogy with existing words. A good example is software, formed by analogy with hardware; other analogous neologisms such as firmware and vaporware have followed. Another example is the humorous[30] term underwhelm, formed by analogy with overwhelm.
  • Analogy is often presented as an alternative mechanism to generative rules for explaining productive formation of structures such as words. Others argue that in fact they are the same mechanism, that rules are analogies that have become entrenched as standard parts of the linguistic system, whereas clearer cases of analogy have simply not (yet) done so (e.g. Langacker 1987.445–447). This view has obvious resonances with the current views of analogy in cognitive science which are discussed above.

Analogy is also a term used in the Neogrammarian school of thought as a catch-all to describe any morphological change in a language that cannot be explained by sound change or borrowing.

Science

Analogies are above all used as a means of conceiving new ideas and hypotheses, which is called a heuristic function of analogical reasoning.

Analogical arguments can play also probative function, serving then as a means of proving the rightness of particular theses and theories. This application of analogical reasoning in science is debatable. Probative value of analogy is of importance especially to those kinds of science in which logical or empirical proof is not possible such as theology, philosophy or cosmology in part where it relates to those areas of the cosmos (the universe) that are beyond any empirical observation and knowledge about them stems from the human insight and extrasensory cognition.

Analogy may be used in order to illustrate and teach. In order to enlighten pupils on the relations that happens between or inside certain things or phenomena, a teacher may refer to other things or phenomena that pupils are more familiar with It may help in creating or elucidating one theory (theoretical model) via the workings of another theory (theoretical model). Thus it can be used in theoretical and applied sciences in the form of models or simulations which can be considered as strong analogies. Other much weaker analogies assist in understanding and describing functional behaviours of similar systems. For instance, an analogy commonly used in electronics textbooks compares electrical circuits to hydraulics.[31] Another example is the analog ear based on electrical, electronic or mechanical devices.

Mathematics

Some types of analogies can have a precise mathematical formulation through the concept of isomorphism. In detail, this means that given two mathematical structures of the same type, an analogy between them can be thought of as a bijection between them which preserves some or all of the relevant structure. For example,   and   are isomorphic as vector spaces, but the complex numbers,  , have more structure than   does:   is a field as well as a vector space.

Category theory takes the idea of mathematical analogy much further with the concept of functors. Given two categories C and D, a functor f from C to D can be thought of as an analogy between C and D, because f has to map objects of C to objects of D and arrows of C to arrows of D in such a way that the compositional structure of the two categories is preserved. This is similar to the structure mapping theory of analogy of Dedre Gentner, in that it formalizes the idea of analogy as a function which satisfies certain conditions.

Artificial intelligence

Steven Phillips and William H. Wilson[32][33] use category theory to mathematically demonstrate how the analogical reasoning in the human mind, that is free of the spurious inferences that plague conventional artificial intelligence models, (called systematicity), could arise naturally from the use of relationships between the internal arrows that keep the internal structures of the categories rather than the mere relationships between the objects (called "representational states"). Thus, the mind may use analogies between domains whose internal structures fit according with a natural transformation and reject those that do not.

See also case-based reasoning.

Anatomy

In anatomy, two anatomical structures are considered to be analogous when they serve similar functions but are not evolutionarily related, such as the legs of vertebrates and the legs of insects. Analogous structures are the result of convergent evolution and should be contrasted with homologous structures.

Engineering

Often a physical prototype is built to model and represent some other physical object. For example, wind tunnels are used to test scale models of wings and aircraft, which act as an analogy to full-size wings and aircraft.

For example, the MONIAC (an analog computer) used the flow of water in its pipes as an analog to the flow of money in an economy.

Cybernetics

Where there is dependence and hence interaction between a pair or more of biological or physical participants communication occurs and the stresses produced describe internal models inside the participants. Pask in his conversation theory asserts there exists an analogy exhibiting both similarities and differences between any pair of the participants' internal models or concepts.

History

In the history science comparative historical analysis is often using the concept of analogy and analogical reasoning. Recent computational approaches operating on large document archives allow for automatically finding analogical entities from the past for arbitrary user queries (e.g., Myanmar - Burma) [34] and for their explanation.[35]

Morality

Analogical reasoning plays a very important part in morality. This may be in part because morality is supposed to be impartial and fair. If it is wrong to do something in a situation A, and situation B is analogous to A in all relevant features, then it is also wrong to perform that action in situation B. Moral particularism accepts analogical moral reasoning, rejecting both deduction and induction, since only the former can do without moral principles.

Law

In law, analogy is primarily used to resolve issues on which there is no previous authority. A distinction can be made between analogical reasoning employed in statutory law and analogical reasoning present in precedential law (case law).

Statutory

In statutory law analogy is used in order to fill the so-called lacunas or gaps or loopholes.

A gap arises when a specific case or legal issue is not explicitly dealt with in written law. Then, one may try to identify a statutory provision which covers the cases that are similar to the case at hand and apply to this case this provision by analogy. Such a gap, in civil law countries, is referred to as a gap extra legem (outside of the law), while analogy which liquidates it is termed analogy extra legem (outside of the law). The very case at hand is named: an unprovided case.

A gap next comes into being when there is a statutory provision which applies to the case at hand but this provision leads in this case to an unwanted outcome. Then, upon analogy to another statutory provision that covers cases similar to the case at hand, this case is resolved upon this provision instead of the provision that applies to it directly. This gap is called a gap contra legem (against the law), while analogy which fills this gap is referred to as analogy contra legem (against the law).

A third gap occurs where a statutory provision regulates the case at hand, but is vague or equivocal. In such circumstances, to decide the case at hand, one may try to ascertain the meaning of this provision by recourse to statutory provisions which address cases that are similar to the case at hand or other cases that are regulated by vague/equivocal provision. A gap of this type is named gap intra legem (within the law) and analogy which deals with it is referred to as analogy intra legem (within the law).

The similarity upon which statutory analogy depends on may stem from the resemblance of raw facts of the cases being compared, the purpose (the so-called ratio legis which is generally the will of the legislature) of a statutory provision which is applied by analogy or some other sources.

Statutory analogy may be also based upon more than one statutory provision or even a spirit of law. In the latter case, it is called analogy iuris (from the law in general) as opposed to analogy legis (from a specific legal provision or provisions).

Case

In precedential law (case law), analogies can be drawn from precedent cases (cases decided in past). The judge who decides the case at hand may find that the facts of this case are similar to the facts of one of precedential cases to an extent that the outcomes of these cases are justified to be the same or similar. Such use of analogy in precedential law pertains mainly to the so-called: cases of first impression, i.e. the cases which as yet have not been regulated by any binding judicial precedent (are not covered by a ratio decidendi of such a precedent).

Reasoning from (dis)analogy is amply employed, while a judge is distinguishing a precedent. That is, upon the discerned differences between the case at hand and the precedential case, a judge reject to decide the case upon the precedent whose ratio decidendi (precedential rule) embraces the case at hand.

There is also much room for some other usages of analogy in the province of precedential law. One of them is resort to analogical reasoning, while resolving the conflict between two or more precedents which all apply to the case at hand despite dictating different legal outcome for that case. Analogy can also take part in ascertaining the contents of ratio decidendi, deciding upon obsolete precedents or quoting precedents form other jurisdictions. It is too visible in legal Education, notably in the US (the so-called 'case method').

Restrictions

In legal matters, sometimes the use of analogy is forbidden (by the very law or common agreement between judges and scholars). The most common instances concern criminal, administrative and tax law.

Analogy should not be resorted to in criminal matters whenever its outcome would be unfavorable to the accused or suspect. Such a ban finds its footing in the very principle: "nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege", a principle which is understood in the way that there is no crime (punishment) unless it is expressly provided for in a statutory provision or an already existing judicial precedent.

Analogy should be applied with caution in the domain of tax law. Here, the principle: "nullum tributum sine lege" justifies a general ban on the employment of analogy that would lead to an increase in taxation or whose results would – for some other reason – be to the detriment to the interests of taxpayers.

Extending by analogy those provisions of administrative law that restrict human rights and the rights of the citizens (particularly the category of the so-called "individual rights" or "basic rights") is as a rule prohibited. Analogy generally should also not be resorted to in order to make the citizen's burdens and obligations larger or more vexatious.

The other limitations on the use of analogy in law, among many others, pertain to:

  • the analogical extension of statutory provisions that involve exceptions to more general statutory regulation or provisions (this restriction flows from the well-known, especially in civil law continental legal systems, Latin maxims: "exceptiones non sunt excendentae", "exception est strictissimae interpretationis" and "singularia non sunt extendenda")
  • the making of the use of an analogical argument with regard to those statutory provisions which comprise enumerations (lists)
  • extending by analogy those statutory provisions that give impression that the Legislator intended to regulate some issues in an exclusive (exhaustive) manner (such a manner is especially implied when the wording of a given statutory provision involves such pointers as: "only", "exclusively", "solely", "always", "never") or which have a plain precise meaning.

In civil law, analogy is permitted or required by law. But also in this branch of law there are some restrictions confining the possible scope of the use of an analogical argument. Such is, for instance, the prohibition to use analogy in relation to provisions regarding time limits or a general ban on the recourse to analogical arguments which lead to extension of those statutory provisions which envisage some obligations or burdens or which order (mandate) something. The other examples concern the usage of analogy in the field of property law, especially when one is going to create some new property rights by it or to extend these statutory provisions whose terms are unambiguous (unequivocal) and plain (clear), e.g.: be of or under a certain age.

Teaching strategies

Analogies as defined in rhetoric are a comparison between words, but an analogy can be used in teaching as well. An analogy as used in teaching would be comparing a topic that students are already familiar with, with a new topic that is being introduced so that students can get a better understanding of the topic and relate back to previous knowledge. Shawn Glynn, a professor in the department of educational psychology and instructional technology at the University of Georgia, developed a theory on teaching with analogies and developed steps to explain the process of teaching with this method. The steps for teaching with analogies are as follows: Step one is introducing the new topic that is about to be taught and giving some general knowledge on the subject. Step two is reviewing the concept that the students already know to ensure they have the proper knowledge to assess the similarities between the two concepts. Step three is finding relevant features within the analogy of the two concepts. Step four is finding similarities between the two concepts so students are able to compare and contrast them in order to understand. Step five is indicating where the analogy breaks down between the two concepts. And finally, step six is drawing a conclusion about the analogy and comparison of the new material with the already learned material. Typically this method is used to learn topics in science.[36]

In 1989, teacher Kerry Ruef began a program titled The Private Eye Project. It is a method of teaching that revolves around using analogies in the classroom to better explain topics. She thought of the idea to use analogies as a part of curriculum because she was observing objects once and she said, "my mind was noting what else each object reminded me of..." This led her to teach with the question, "what does [the subject or topic] remind you of?" The idea of comparing subjects and concepts led to the development of The Private Eye Project as a method of teaching.[37] The program is designed to build critical thinking skills with analogies as one of the main themes revolving around it. While Glynn focuses on using analogies to teach science, The Private Eye Project can be used for any subject including writing, math, art, social studies, and invention. It is now used by thousands of schools around the country.[38] There are also various pedagogic innovations now emerging that use visual analogies for cross-disciplinary teaching and research, for instance between science and the humanities.[39]

Religion

Catholicism

The Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 taught: For between creator and creature there can be noted no similarity so great that a greater dissimilarity cannot be seen between them.[40]

The theological exploration of this subject is called the analogia entis. The consequence of this theory is that all true statements concerning God (excluding the concrete details of Jesus' earthly life) are analogical and approximations, without that implying any falsity. Such analogical and true statements would include God is, God is Love, God is a consuming fire, God is near to all who call him, or God as Trinity, where being, love, fire, distance, number must be classed as analogies that allow human cognition of what is infinitely beyond positive or negative language.

The use of theological statements in syllogisms must take into account their essential analogical character, in that every analogy breaks down when stretched beyond its intended meaning.

Islam

Islamic jurisprudence makes ample use of analogy as a means of extrapolating from sources of law. The bounds and rules employed to make analogical deduction vary greatly between madhabs and to a lesser extent individual scholars. It is nonetheless a generally accepted source of law within jurisprudential epistemology, with the chief opposition to it forming the dhahiri (ostensiblist) school.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, revised and augmented throughout by Sir Henry Stuart Jones, with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1940) on Perseus Digital Library. . Archived from the original on 2016-04-23. Retrieved 2018-05-21.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ analogy, Online Etymology Dictionary. 2010-03-24 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Hofstadter in Gentner et al. 2001.
  4. ^ "Journal of Statistics Education, V11N2: Martin". from the original on 2013-03-07. Retrieved 2012-12-10., Michael A. Martin, The Use of Analogies and Heuristics in Teaching Introductory Statistical Methods
  5. ^ Turney 2006
  6. ^ a b c Shelley 2003
  7. ^ Hallaq, Wael B. (1985–1986). "The Logic of Legal Reasoning in Religious and Non-Religious Cultures: The Case of Islamic Law and the Common Law". Cleveland State Law Review. 34: 79–96 [93–5].
  8. ^ Ruth Mas (1998). "Qiyas: A Study in Islamic Logic" (PDF). Folia Orientalia. 34: 113–128. ISSN 0015-5675. (PDF) from the original on 2008-07-08.
  9. ^ John F. Sowa; Arun K. Majumdar (2003). "Analogical reasoning". Conceptual Structures for Knowledge Creation and Communication, Proceedings of ICCS 2003. Berlin: Springer-Verlag. from the original on 2010-04-05., pp. 16–36
  10. ^ See Dedre Gentner et al. 2001
  11. ^ See Gentner et al. 2001 and Gentner's publication page 2010-06-14 at the Wayback Machine.
  12. ^ Doumas, Hummel, and Sandhofer, 2008
  13. ^ Keane, M.T. and Brayshaw, M. (1988). The Incremental Analogical Machine: a computational model of analogy. In D. Sleeman (Ed). European working session on learning. (pp.53–62). London: Pitman.
  14. ^ Keane, M.T. Ledgeway; Duff, S (1994). "Constraints on analogical mapping: a comparison of three models" (PDF). Cognitive Science. 18 (3): 387–438. doi:10.1016/0364-0213(94)90015-9.
  15. ^ Keane, M.T. (1997). "What makes an analogy difficult? The effects of order and causal structure in analogical mapping". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 23 (4): 946–967. doi:10.1037/0278-7393.23.4.946. PMID 9231438.
  16. ^ See Chalmers et al. 1991
  17. ^ Forbus et al., 1998
  18. ^ Morrison and Dietrich, 1995
  19. ^ Gentner, Dedre (April 1983). "Structure-Mapping: A Theoretical Framework for Analogy*". Cognitive Science. 7 (2): 155–170. doi:10.1207/s15516709cog0702_3. S2CID 5371492.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g Gentner, Dedre (2006), "Analogical Reasoning, Psychology of", Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, American Cancer Society, doi:10.1002/0470018860.s00473, ISBN 978-0-470-01886-6, retrieved 2020-12-09
  21. ^ a b c d Gentner, D.; Gunn, V. (June 2001). "Structural alignment facilitates the noticing of differences". Memory & Cognition. 29 (4): 565–577. doi:10.3758/bf03200458. ISSN 0090-502X. PMID 11504005. S2CID 1745309.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Gentner, Dedre; Smith, Linsey A. (2013-03-11). Reisberg, Daniel (ed.). "Analogical Learning and Reasoning". The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Psychology. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195376746.001.0001. ISBN 9780195376746. Retrieved 2020-12-09.
  23. ^ a b c Gentner, Dedre; Stevens, Albert L. (2014-01-14). Mental Models. Psychology Press. doi:10.4324/9781315802725. ISBN 978-1-315-80272-5.
  24. ^ a b Clement, Catherine A.; Gentner, Dedre (1991-01-01). "Systematicity as a selection constraint in analogical mapping". Cognitive Science. 15 (1): 89–132. doi:10.1016/0364-0213(91)80014-V. ISSN 0364-0213.
  25. ^ a b c d Gentner, Dedre; Hoyos, Christian (2017). "Analogy and Abstraction". Topics in Cognitive Science. 9 (3): 672–693. doi:10.1111/tops.12278. ISSN 1756-8765. PMID 28621480.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Hespos, Susan J.; Anderson, Erin; Gentner, Dedre (2020), Childers, Jane B. (ed.), "Structure-Mapping Processes Enable Infants' Learning Across Domains Including Language", Language and Concept Acquisition from Infancy Through Childhood: Learning from Multiple Exemplars, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 79–104, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-35594-4_5, ISBN 978-3-030-35594-4, S2CID 213450124, retrieved 2020-12-09
  27. ^ Christie, Stella; Gentner, Dedre; Call, Josep; Haun, Daniel Benjamin Moritz (February 2016). "Sensitivity to Relational Similarity and Object Similarity in Apes and Children". Current Biology. 26 (4): 531–535. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2015.12.054. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 26853364. S2CID 17925163.
  28. ^ a b Research and Education Association (June 1994). "2. Analogies". In Fogiel, M (ed.). Verbal Tutor for the SAT. Piscataway, New Jersey: Research & Education Assoc. pp. 84–86. ISBN 978-0-87891-963-5. OCLC 32747316. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  29. ^ Schwartz, Linda; Heidrich, Stanley H.; Heidrich, Delana S. (1 January 2007). Power Practice: Analogies and Idioms, eBook. Huntington Beach, Calif.: Creative Teaching Press. pp. 4–. ISBN 978-1-59198-953-0. OCLC 232131611. Retrieved 25 January 2018.
  30. ^ . Oxford Dictionaries | English. Archived from the original on 2016-08-16. Retrieved 2017-04-07.
  31. ^ Going with the flow: Using analogies to explain electric circuits. Mark D. Walker and David Garlovsky. School Science Review, 97, no. 361 (2016): 51-58.https://www.academia.edu/33380466/Going_with_the_flow_Using_analogies_to_explain_electric_circuits_Going_with_the_flow_Using_analogies_to_explain_electric_circuits
  32. ^ Phillips, Steven; Wilson, William H. (July 2010). "Categorial Compositionality: A Category Theory Explanation for the Systematicity of Human Cognition". PLOS Computational Biology. 6 (7): e1000858. Bibcode:2010PLSCB...6E0858P. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000858. PMC 2908697. PMID 20661306.
  33. ^ Phillips, Steven; Wilson, William H. (August 2011). "Categorial Compositionality II: Universal Constructions and a General Theory of (Quasi-)Systematicity in Human Cognition". PLOS Computational Biology. 7 (8): e1002102. Bibcode:2011PLSCB...7E2102P. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002102. PMC 3154512. PMID 21857816.
  34. ^ Zhang, Y., Jatowt, A., Bhowmick, S., & Tanaka, K. (2015, July). Omnia mutantur, nihil interit: Connecting past with present by finding corresponding terms across time. In Proceedings of the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics and the 7th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing (Volume 1: Long Papers) (pp. 645-655). pdf
  35. ^ Zhang, Yating, Adam Jatowt, and Katsumi Tanaka. "Towards understanding word embeddings: Automatically explaining similarity of terms." In 2016 IEEE international conference on big data (big data), pp. 823-832. IEEE, 2016. pdf
  36. ^ Glynn, Shawn M. Teaching with Analogies. 2008.
  37. ^ Johnson, Katie. Educational Leadership: Exploring the World with the Private Eye. September 1995. 16 October 2013 .
  38. ^ The Private Eye Project. The Private Eye Project. 2013.
  39. ^ Mario Petrucci. "Crosstalk, Mutation, Chaos: bridge-building between the sciences and literary studies using Visual Analogy". from the original on 2013-09-25. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  40. ^ Fourth Lateran Council of 1215

References

  • Cajetan, Tommaso De Vio, (1498), De Nominum Analogia, P.N. Zammit (ed.), 1934, The Analogy of Names, Koren, Henry J. and Bushinski, Edward A (trans.), 1953, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press.
  • Chalmers, D.J. et al. (1991). Chalmers, D.J., French, R.M., Hofstadter, D., High-Level Perception, Representation, and Analogy.
  • Coelho, Ivo (2010). "Analogy." ACPI Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Ed. Johnson J. Puthenpurackal. Bangalore: ATC. 1:64-68.
  • Doumas, L. A. A., Hummel, J.E., and Sandhofer, C. (2008). Psychological Review, 115, 1-43.
  • Drescher, F (2017). "Analogy in Thomas Aquinas and Ludwig Wittgenstein. A comparison". New Blackfriars. 99 (1081): 346–359. doi:10.1111/nbfr.12273.
  • Forbus, K. et al. (1998). .
  • Gentner, D. (1983). Structure-mapping: A theoretical framework for analogy. Cognitive Science, 7, 155–170. (Reprinted in A. Collins & E. E. Smith (Eds.), Readings in cognitive science: A perspective from psychology and artificial intelligence. Palo Alto, CA: Kaufmann).
  • Gentner, D., Holyoak, K.J., Kokinov, B. (Eds.) (2001). The Analogical Mind: Perspectives from Cognitive Science. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-57139-0
  • Hofstadter, D. (2001). Analogy as the Core of Cognition, in Dedre Gentner, Keith Holyoak, and Boicho Kokinov (eds.) The Analogical Mind: Perspectives from Cognitive Science, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2001, pp. 499–538.
  • Holland, J.H., Holyoak, K.J., Nisbett, R.E., and Thagard, P. (1986). Induction: Processes of Inference, Learning, and Discovery. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-58096-9.
  • Holyoak, K.J., and Thagard, P. (1995). Mental Leaps: Analogy in Creative Thought. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-58144-2.
  • Holyoak, K.J., and Thagard, P. (1997). The Analogical Mind.
  • Hummel, J.E., and Holyoak, K.J. (2005). Relational Reasoning in a Neurally Plausible Cognitive Architecture
  • Itkonen, E. (2005). Analogy as Structure and Process. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
  • Juthe, A. (2005). "Argument by Analogy", in Argumentation (2005) 19: 1–27.
  • Keane, M.T. Ledgeway; Duff, S (1994). "Constraints on analogical mapping: a comparison of three models" (PDF). Cognitive Science. 18 (3): 287–334. doi:10.1016/0364-0213(94)90015-9.
  • Keane, M.T. (1997). "What makes an analogy difficult? The effects of order and causal structure in analogical mapping". Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition. 123 (4): 946–967. doi:10.1037/0278-7393.23.4.946. PMID 9231438.
  • Lamond, G. (2006). Precedent and Analogy in Legal Reasoning, in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Langacker, Ronald W. (1987). Foundations of Cognitive grammar. Vol. I, Theoretical prerequisites. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Little, J (2000). "Analogy in Science: Where Do We Go From Here?". Rhetoric Society Quarterly. 30: 69–92. doi:10.1080/02773940009391170. S2CID 145500740.
  • Little, J (2008). "The Role of Analogy in George Gamow's Derivation of Drop Energy". Technical Communication Quarterly. 17 (2): 1–19. doi:10.1080/10572250701878876. S2CID 32910655.
  • Melandri, Enzo. La linea e il circolo. Studio logico-filosofico sull'analogia (1968), Quodlibet, Macerata 2004 prefazione di Giorgio Agamben.
  • Morrison, C., and Dietrich, E. (1995). .
  • Pessali, H.; Dalto, F. and Fernández, R. (2015). Analogies we suffer by: the case of the state as a household. In: Tae-Hee Jo; Zdravka Todorova (Org.). Advancing the Frontiers of Heterodox Economics: Essays in Honor of Frederic S. Lee. Nova Iorque: Routledge, p. 281-295.
  • Perelman, Ch, Olbrechts-Tyteca, L. (1969), The New Rhetoric: A Treatise on Argumentation, Notre Dame 1969.
  • Ross, J.F., (1982), Portraying Analogy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Ross, J.F. (October 1970). "Analogy and The Resolution of Some Cognitivity Problems". The Journal of Philosophy. 67 (20): 725–746. doi:10.2307/2024008. JSTOR 2024008.
  • Ross, J.F. (September 1961). "Analogy as a Rule of Meaning for Religious Language". International Philosophical Quarterly. 1 (3): 468–502. doi:10.5840/ipq19611356.
  • Ross, J.F., (1958), A Critical Analysis of the Theory of Analogy of St Thomas Aquinas, (Ann Arbor, MI: University Microfilms Inc).
  • Shelley, C. (2003). Multiple analogies in Science and Philosophy. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.
  • Turney, P.D.; Littman, M.L. (2005). "Corpus-based learning of analogies and semantic relations". Machine Learning. 60 (1–3): 251–278. arXiv:cs/0508103. doi:10.1007/s10994-005-0913-1. S2CID 9322367.
  • Turney, P.D. (2006). "Similarity of semantic relations". Computational Linguistics. 32 (3): 379–416. arXiv:cs/0608100. doi:10.1162/coli.2006.32.3.379. S2CID 2468783.

External links

  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy "Analogy and Analogical Reasoning", by Paul Bartha.
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy "Medieval Theories of Analogy", by E. Jennifer Ashworth.
  • Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy "Precedent and Analogy in Legal Reasoning", by Grant Lamond.
  • Dictionary of the History of Ideas Analogy in Early Greek Thought.
  • Dictionary of the History of Ideas Analogy in Patristic and Medieval Thought.
  • Computational approaches to computing temporal analogy.

analogy, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, lack, focus, about, more, than, topic, please, help, improve, this, article, possibly, splitting. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may lack focus or may be about more than one topic Please help improve this article possibly by splitting the article and or by introducing a disambiguation page or discuss this issue on the talk page April 2023 This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message For other uses see Analogy disambiguation Analogy from Greek analogia proportion from ana upon according to also against anew logos ratio also word speech reckoning 1 2 is a cognitive process of transferring information or meaning from a particular subject the analog or source to another the target or a linguistic expression corresponding to such a process In a narrower sense analogy is an inference or an argument from one particular to another particular as opposed to deduction induction and abduction in which at least one of the premises or the conclusion is general rather than particular in nature The term analogy can also refer to the relation between the source and the target themselves which is often though not always a similarity as in the biological notion of analogy Ernest Rutherford s model of the atom modified by Niels Bohr made an analogy between the atom and the Solar System Analogy plays a significant role in problem solving as well as decision making argumentation perception generalization memory creativity invention prediction emotion explanation conceptualization and communication It lies behind basic tasks such as the identification of places objects and people for example in face perception and facial recognition systems It has been argued that analogy is the core of cognition 3 Specific analogical language comprises exemplification comparisons metaphors similes allegories and parables but not metonymy Phrases like and so on and the like as if and the very word like also rely on an analogical understanding by the receiver of a message including them Analogy is important not only in ordinary language and common sense where proverbs and idioms give many examples of its application but also in science philosophy law and the humanities The concepts of association comparison correspondence mathematical and morphological homology homomorphism iconicity isomorphism metaphor resemblance and similarity are closely related to analogy In cognitive linguistics the notion of conceptual metaphor may be equivalent to that of analogy Analogy is also a basis for any comparative arguments as well as experiments whose results are transmitted to objects that have been not under examination e g experiments on rats when results are applied to humans Analogy has been studied and discussed since classical antiquity by philosophers scientists theologists and lawyers The last few decades have shown a renewed interest in analogy most notably in cognitive science Contents 1 Source and target 2 Models and theories 2 1 Identity of relation 2 2 Shared abstraction 2 3 Special case of induction 2 4 Shared structure 3 Psychology 3 1 Structure mapping theory 3 1 1 Structural alignment 3 1 2 Inference 3 1 3 Evaluation 3 2 Factors in reasoning 3 2 1 Language 3 2 2 Transparency 3 2 3 Processing capacities 3 3 Capability development 4 Applications and types 4 1 Logic 4 2 Linguistics 4 3 Science 4 3 1 Mathematics 4 3 2 Artificial intelligence 4 3 3 Anatomy 4 3 4 Engineering 4 3 5 Cybernetics 4 3 6 History 4 4 Morality 4 5 Law 4 5 1 Statutory 4 5 2 Case 4 5 3 Restrictions 4 6 Teaching strategies 4 7 Religion 4 7 1 Catholicism 4 7 2 Islam 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External links Source and target EditWith respect to the terms source and target there are two distinct traditions of usage The logical and cultures and economics tradition speaks of an arrow homomorphism mapping or morphism from what is typically the more complex domain or source to what is typically the less complex codomain or target using all of these words in the sense of mathematical category theory The tradition in cognitive psychology in literary theory and in specializations within philosophy outside of logic speaks of a mapping from what is typically the more familiar area of experience the source to what is typically the more problematic area of experience the target Models and theories EditIdentity of relation Edit In ancient Greek the word analogia analogia originally meant proportionality in the mathematical sense and it was indeed sometimes translated to Latin as proportio citation needed From there analogy was understood as identity of relation between any two ordered pairs whether of mathematical nature or not Kant s Critique of Judgment held to this notion Kant argued that there can be exactly the same relation between two completely different objects The same notion of analogy was used in the US based SAT tests that included analogy questions in the form A is to B as C is to what For example Hand is to palm as foot is to These questions were usually given in the Aristotelian format HAND PALM FOOT While most competent English speakers will immediately give the right answer to the analogy question sole it is more difficult to identify and describe the exact relation that holds both between pairs such as hand and palm and between foot and sole This relation is not apparent in some lexical definitions of palm and sole where the former is defined as the inner surface of the hand and the latter as the underside of the foot Analogy and abstraction are different cognitive processes and analogy is often an easier one This analogy is not comparing all the properties between a hand and a foot but rather comparing the relationship between a hand and its palm to a foot and its sole 4 While a hand and a foot have many dissimilarities the analogy focuses on their similarity in having an inner surface A computer algorithm has achieved human level performance on multiple choice analogy questions from the SAT test The algorithm measures the similarity of relations between pairs of words e g the similarity between the pairs HAND PALM and FOOT SOLE by statistical analysis of a large collection of text It answers SAT questions by selecting the choice with the highest relational similarity 5 Shared abstraction Edit In several cultures which the Sun is the source of an analogy to God Greek philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle used a wider notion of analogy They saw analogy as a shared abstraction 6 Analogous objects did not share necessarily a relation but also an idea a pattern a regularity an attribute an effect or a philosophy These authors also accepted that comparisons metaphors and images allegories could be used as arguments and sometimes they called them analogies Analogies should also make those abstractions easier to understand and give confidence to the ones using them The Middle Ages saw an increased use and theorization of analogy Roman lawyers had already used analogical reasoning and the Greek word analogia Medieval lawyers distinguished analogia legis and analogia iuris see below In Islamic logic analogical reasoning was used for the process of qiyas in Islamic sharia law and fiqh jurisprudence In Christian theology analogical arguments were accepted in order to explain the attributes of God Aquinas made a distinction between equivocal univocal and analogical terms the last being those like healthy that have different but related meanings Not only a person can be healthy but also the food that is good for health see the contemporary distinction between polysemy and homonymy Thomas Cajetan wrote an influential treatise on analogy In all of these cases the wide Platonic and Aristotelian notion of analogy was preserved James Francis Ross in Portraying Analogy 1982 the first substantive examination of the topic since Cajetan s De Nominum Analogia demonstrated that analogy is a systematic and universal feature of natural languages with identifiable and law like characteristics which explain how the meanings of words in a sentence are interdependent Special case of induction Edit On the contrary Ibn Taymiyya 7 8 9 Francis Bacon and later John Stuart Mill argued that analogy is simply a special case of induction 6 In their view analogy is an inductive inference from common known attributes to another probable common attribute which is known only about the source of the analogy in the following form Premises a is C D E F G b is C D E F Conclusion b is probably G Shared structure Edit According to Shelley 2003 the study of the coelacanth drew heavily on analogies from other fish Contemporary cognitive scientists use a wide notion of analogy extensionally close to that of Plato and Aristotle but framed by Gentner s 1983 structure mapping theory 10 The same idea of mapping between source and target is used by conceptual metaphor and conceptual blending theorists Structure mapping theory concerns both psychology and computer science According to this view analogy depends on the mapping or alignment of the elements of source and target The mapping takes place not only between objects but also between relations of objects and between relations of relations The whole mapping yields the assignment of a predicate or a relation to the target Structure mapping theory has been applied and has found considerable confirmation in psychology It has had reasonable success in computer science and artificial intelligence see below Some studies extended the approach to specific subjects such as metaphor and similarity 11 Keith Holyoak and Paul Thagard 1997 developed their multiconstraint theory within structure mapping theory They defend that the coherence of an analogy depends on structural consistency semantic similarity and purpose Structural consistency is maximal when the analogy is an isomorphism although lower levels are admitted Similarity demands that the mapping connects similar elements and relations of source and target at any level of abstraction It is maximal when there are identical relations and when connected elements have many identical attributes An analogy achieves its purpose insofar as it helps solve the problem at hand The multiconstraint theory faces some difficulties when there are multiple sources but these can be overcome 6 Hummel and Holyoak 2005 recast the multiconstraint theory within a neural network architecture A problem for the multiconstraint theory arises from its concept of similarity which in this respect is not obviously different from analogy itself Computer applications demand that there are some identical attributes or relations at some level of abstraction The model was extended Doumas Hummel and Sandhofer 2008 to learn relations from unstructured examples providing the only current account of how symbolic representations can be learned from examples 12 Mark Keane and Brayshaw 1988 developed their Incremental Analogy Machine IAM to include working memory constraints as well as structural semantic and pragmatic constraints so that a subset of the base analog is selected and mapping from base to target occurs in a serial manner 13 14 Empirical evidence shows that human analogical mapping performance is influenced by information presentation order 15 Eqaan Doug and his team 16 challenged the shared structure theory and mostly its applications in computer science They argue that there is no line between perception including high level perception and analogical thought In fact analogy occurs not only after but also before and at the same time as high level perception In high level perception humans make representations by selecting relevant information from low level stimuli Perception is necessary for analogy but analogy is also necessary for high level perception Chalmers et al conclude that analogy actually is high level perception Forbus et al 1998 claim that this is only a metaphor 17 It has been argued Morrison and Dietrich 1995 that Hofstadter s and Gentner s groups do not defend opposite views but are instead dealing with different aspects of analogy 18 Psychology EditThis section duplicates the scope of other articles Please discuss this issue on the talk page and edit it to conform with Wikipedia s Manual of Style by replacing the section with a link and a summary of the repeated material or by spinning off the repeated text into an article in its own right April 2023 Structure mapping theory Edit Structure mapping originally proposed by Dedre Gentner is a theory in psychology that describes the psychological processes involved in reasoning through and learning from analogies 19 More specifically this theory aims to describe how familiar knowledge or knowledge about a base domain can be used to inform an individual s understanding of a less familiar idea or a target domain 20 According to this theory individuals view their knowledge of domains as interconnected structures 21 In other words a domain is viewed as consisting of objects the object s properties and the relationships that characterize how objects and their properties interact 22 The process of analogy then involves recognizing similar structures between the two domains inferring further similarity in structure by mapping additional relationships of a base domain to the target domain and then checking those inferences against existing knowledge of the target domain 20 22 In general it has been found that people prefer analogies where the two systems have a deep degree of correspondence e g relationships across the domains correspond as opposed to just the objects across domains corresponding when attempting to draw inferences between the systems This is also known as the systematicity principle 21 An example that has been used to illustrate structure mapping theory comes from Gentner and Gentner 1983 and uses the domains of flowing water and electricity 23 In a system of flowing water the water is carried through pipes and the rate of water flow is determined by the pressure of the system This relationship is analogous to that of electricity flowing through an electrical circuit In a circuit the electricity is carried through wires and the current or rate of flow of electricity is determined by the voltage or electrical pressure Given the similarity in structure or structural alignment between these domains structure mapping theory would predict that relationships from one of these domains would be inferred in the other via analogy 22 Structural alignment Edit Structural alignment is one process involved in the larger structure mapping theory 21 When establishing structural alignment between two domains that are being compared an individual is attempting to identify as many commonalities between the systems as possible while maintaining a one to one correspondence between elements i e objects properties and relationships 21 In the flowing water and electricity analogy a one to one correspondence is illustrated by water pipes mapping on to wires but not corresponding with any other elements in the circuit Furthemore structural alignment is also characterized by parallel connectivity or the idea that if a one to one correspondence is generated between relationships across two systems e g the rate of water flow through a pipe increases with pressure similarly to how the current in an electrical circuit increases with voltage then the relevant objects and properties must also correspond e g the rate of flow of water corresponds to electrical current and water pressure corresponds to voltage 23 Inference Edit Analogical inference is a second process involved in the theory of structure mapping and happens after structural alignment has been established between two domains being compared 22 During this process an individual draws inferences about the target domain by projecting information from the base domain to said target domain 20 The following example can be used to illustrate this process 23 where 1 represents information about a base domain 2 represents correspondences between the base and target domain and 3 represents an inference about the target domain In plumbing systems narrow pipes lead to a decrease in rate of flow of water Narrow pipes correspond to resistors in an electrical circuit and water corresponds to electricity In an electrical circuit resistors lead to a decrease in the rate of flow of electricityEvaluation Edit Evaluation is a third process involved in the theory of structure mapping and happens after structures have been aligned and inferences about the target domain have been proposed During evaluation an individual is judging whether the analogy is relevant and plausible 22 This process has been described as solving the selection problem in analogy 24 or explaining how individuals choose which inferences to map from the base to target domain as analogies would be fruitless if all possible inferences were made An analogy can be evaluated by two factors Factual correctness When evaluating an inference in terms of correctness an individual compares the inference to their existing knowledge to determine whether the inference is true or false 20 In the case once cannot determine the correctness then the one may consider the adaptability of the inference or how easily the knowledge is modified when translating it from the base to target domain 22 Goal When evaluating an analogy it is important that the inferences provide insight that is relevant to the situation at hand For example when attempting to solve a problem the inference should provide insight that moves one toward a solution 20 or generate new potentially helpful knowledge 24 Factors in reasoning Edit Language Edit Language can support analogical reasoning when relational labels are provided to compensate for low transparency 25 For example children struggle when they are asked to identify the relational structure between sets of boxes e g Set 1 a small medium and large box Set 2 a medium large and extra large box Children will tend to map the medium box in Set 1 where it is intermediate in size to the medium box in Set 2 where it is smallest in size failing to recognize that they should map the smallest box in Set 1 to the smallest box in Set 2 Children improve in their ability to identify this relationship when they have given relational labels such as baby mommy and daddy 26 While language may support analogical reasoning it may not be necessary Research has found that monkeys who have limited language abilities are also able to reason relationally but this only occurs when base and target are highly aligned 27 Transparency Edit Analogical reasoning is impacted by how similar the objects being mapped to each other are When object correspondences between the base and target system are highly similar there is said to be a high degree of transparency which aids analogical processes 22 High transparency is helpful when using analogy to support problem solving 20 For example if a student is asked to calculate how many golf balls each golfer will need at a tournament they will then be able to apply this solution to future problems when the objects are highly similar e g reasoning about how many tennis balls each player will need 20 Processing capacities Edit In order to engage in analogical processes an individual needs time to work through the processes of alignment inference and evaluation If not given adequate time to engage in analogical reasoning then one is more likely to fixate on lower level object correspondences between the two systems as opposed identifying potentially more informative higher order relationships that are analogous 22 Similar effects also occur if one s working memory is under a high cognitive load at the time e g the person is trying to reason through an analogy while also keeping a word in the mind 22 Capability development Edit Research suggests children are capable of using comparisons in order to learn abstract patterns but this sometimes requires prompting from another 26 To provide support for this claim researchers taught 3 and 4 year olds a simple relationship by showing them a series of pictures Each picture had 3 of the same animal and was labeled as a toma for the child Some of these children were prompted to compare the different tomas while others were not After seeing the pictures and some having been prompted to compare the children were tested on whether or not they had learned the abstract pattern i e a toma is a triad of matching animals Children were shown two images and asked Which is the toma The first was a relational match and displayed a triad of matching animals they had not seen before while the second image was an object match and displayed a triad of non matching animals that the child had seen while learning about the relationship The children who had been prompted to compare the tomas while learning were more likely to have learned the pattern and choose the relational match when being tested 25 Children do not always need prompting to make comparisons in order to learn abstract relationships Eventually children undergo a relational shift after which they begin to focus more on identifying similar relational structures across different contexts and less on simply identifying matching objects 26 This shift is critical in cognitive development as continuing to focus attention on specific objects would hinder children s ability to learn abstract patterns and engage in analogical reasoning 26 Interestingly some researchers have proposed that the relational shift does not seem to be driven by maturation in children s underlying cognitive abilities i e working memory and inhibitory control but instead driven by children s relational knowledge such as having labels for the objects that make the relationships more explicit 26 Although there is not ample evidence to determine whether the relational shift is actually driven by maturation in cognitive abilities or increases in relational knowledge 22 Additionally research has identified several factors that may increase the likelihood that a child may spontaneously engage in comparison and learn an abstract relationship without the need for promoting 25 Comparison is more likely when the objects to be compared have spatiotemporal proximity 25 are highly similar although not so similar that they are matching objects which interfere with identifying relationships 22 or share common labels 26 Applications and types EditThis section may contain indiscriminate excessive or irrelevant examples Please improve the article by adding more descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for further suggestions April 2023 Logic Edit Logicians analyze how analogical reasoning is used in arguments from analogy An analogy can be stated using is to and as when representing the analogous relationship between two pairs of expressions for example Smile is to mouth as wink is to eye In the field of mathematics and logic this can be formalized with colon notation to represent the relationships using single colon for ratio and double colon for equality 28 In the field of testing the colon notation of ratios and equality is often borrowed so that the example above might be rendered Smile mouth wink eye and pronounced the same way 28 29 Linguistics Edit An analogy can be the linguistic process that reduces word forms perceived as irregular by remaking them in the shape of more common forms that are governed by rules For example the English verb help once had the preterite holp and the past participle holpen These obsolete forms have been discarded and replaced by helped by the power of analogy or by widened application of the productive Verb ed rule This is called morphological leveling Irregular forms can sometimes be created by analogy one example is the American English past tense form of dive dove formed on analogy with words such as drive drove Neologisms can also be formed by analogy with existing words A good example is software formed by analogy with hardware other analogous neologisms such as firmware and vaporware have followed Another example is the humorous 30 term underwhelm formed by analogy with overwhelm Analogy is often presented as an alternative mechanism to generative rules for explaining productive formation of structures such as words Others argue that in fact they are the same mechanism that rules are analogies that have become entrenched as standard parts of the linguistic system whereas clearer cases of analogy have simply not yet done so e g Langacker 1987 445 447 This view has obvious resonances with the current views of analogy in cognitive science which are discussed above Analogy is also a term used in the Neogrammarian school of thought as a catch all to describe any morphological change in a language that cannot be explained by sound change or borrowing Science Edit Analogies are above all used as a means of conceiving new ideas and hypotheses which is called a heuristic function of analogical reasoning Analogical arguments can play also probative function serving then as a means of proving the rightness of particular theses and theories This application of analogical reasoning in science is debatable Probative value of analogy is of importance especially to those kinds of science in which logical or empirical proof is not possible such as theology philosophy or cosmology in part where it relates to those areas of the cosmos the universe that are beyond any empirical observation and knowledge about them stems from the human insight and extrasensory cognition Analogy may be used in order to illustrate and teach In order to enlighten pupils on the relations that happens between or inside certain things or phenomena a teacher may refer to other things or phenomena that pupils are more familiar with It may help in creating or elucidating one theory theoretical model via the workings of another theory theoretical model Thus it can be used in theoretical and applied sciences in the form of models or simulations which can be considered as strong analogies Other much weaker analogies assist in understanding and describing functional behaviours of similar systems For instance an analogy commonly used in electronics textbooks compares electrical circuits to hydraulics 31 Another example is the analog ear based on electrical electronic or mechanical devices Mathematics Edit Some types of analogies can have a precise mathematical formulation through the concept of isomorphism In detail this means that given two mathematical structures of the same type an analogy between them can be thought of as a bijection between them which preserves some or all of the relevant structure For example R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 and C displaystyle mathbb C are isomorphic as vector spaces but the complex numbers C displaystyle mathbb C have more structure than R 2 displaystyle mathbb R 2 does C displaystyle mathbb C is a field as well as a vector space Category theory takes the idea of mathematical analogy much further with the concept of functors Given two categories C and D a functor f from C to D can be thought of as an analogy between C and D because f has to map objects of C to objects of D and arrows of C to arrows of D in such a way that the compositional structure of the two categories is preserved This is similar to the structure mapping theory of analogy of Dedre Gentner in that it formalizes the idea of analogy as a function which satisfies certain conditions Artificial intelligence Edit Steven Phillips and William H Wilson 32 33 use category theory to mathematically demonstrate how the analogical reasoning in the human mind that is free of the spurious inferences that plague conventional artificial intelligence models called systematicity could arise naturally from the use of relationships between the internal arrows that keep the internal structures of the categories rather than the mere relationships between the objects called representational states Thus the mind may use analogies between domains whose internal structures fit according with a natural transformation and reject those that do not See also case based reasoning Anatomy Edit See also Analogy biology In anatomy two anatomical structures are considered to be analogous when they serve similar functions but are not evolutionarily related such as the legs of vertebrates and the legs of insects Analogous structures are the result of convergent evolution and should be contrasted with homologous structures Engineering Edit Often a physical prototype is built to model and represent some other physical object For example wind tunnels are used to test scale models of wings and aircraft which act as an analogy to full size wings and aircraft For example the MONIAC an analog computer used the flow of water in its pipes as an analog to the flow of money in an economy Cybernetics Edit Where there is dependence and hence interaction between a pair or more of biological or physical participants communication occurs and the stresses produced describe internal models inside the participants Pask in his conversation theory asserts there exists an analogy exhibiting both similarities and differences between any pair of the participants internal models or concepts History Edit In the history science comparative historical analysis is often using the concept of analogy and analogical reasoning Recent computational approaches operating on large document archives allow for automatically finding analogical entities from the past for arbitrary user queries e g Myanmar Burma 34 and for their explanation 35 Morality Edit Analogical reasoning plays a very important part in morality This may be in part because morality is supposed to be impartial and fair If it is wrong to do something in a situation A and situation B is analogous to A in all relevant features then it is also wrong to perform that action in situation B Moral particularism accepts analogical moral reasoning rejecting both deduction and induction since only the former can do without moral principles Law Edit In law analogy is primarily used to resolve issues on which there is no previous authority A distinction can be made between analogical reasoning employed in statutory law and analogical reasoning present in precedential law case law This section duplicates the scope of other articles specifically Principle of typicality Please discuss this issue on the talk page and edit it to conform with Wikipedia s Manual of Style by replacing the section with a link and a summary of the repeated material or by spinning off the repeated text into an article in its own right April 2023 Statutory Edit In statutory law analogy is used in order to fill the so called lacunas or gaps or loopholes A gap arises when a specific case or legal issue is not explicitly dealt with in written law Then one may try to identify a statutory provision which covers the cases that are similar to the case at hand and apply to this case this provision by analogy Such a gap in civil law countries is referred to as a gap extra legem outside of the law while analogy which liquidates it is termed analogy extra legem outside of the law The very case at hand is named an unprovided case A gap next comes into being when there is a statutory provision which applies to the case at hand but this provision leads in this case to an unwanted outcome Then upon analogy to another statutory provision that covers cases similar to the case at hand this case is resolved upon this provision instead of the provision that applies to it directly This gap is called a gap contra legem against the law while analogy which fills this gap is referred to as analogy contra legem against the law A third gap occurs where a statutory provision regulates the case at hand but is vague or equivocal In such circumstances to decide the case at hand one may try to ascertain the meaning of this provision by recourse to statutory provisions which address cases that are similar to the case at hand or other cases that are regulated by vague equivocal provision A gap of this type is named gap intra legem within the law and analogy which deals with it is referred to as analogy intra legem within the law The similarity upon which statutory analogy depends on may stem from the resemblance of raw facts of the cases being compared the purpose the so called ratio legis which is generally the will of the legislature of a statutory provision which is applied by analogy or some other sources Statutory analogy may be also based upon more than one statutory provision or even a spirit of law In the latter case it is called analogy iuris from the law in general as opposed to analogy legis from a specific legal provision or provisions Case Edit In precedential law case law analogies can be drawn from precedent cases cases decided in past The judge who decides the case at hand may find that the facts of this case are similar to the facts of one of precedential cases to an extent that the outcomes of these cases are justified to be the same or similar Such use of analogy in precedential law pertains mainly to the so called cases of first impression i e the cases which as yet have not been regulated by any binding judicial precedent are not covered by a ratio decidendi of such a precedent Reasoning from dis analogy is amply employed while a judge is distinguishing a precedent That is upon the discerned differences between the case at hand and the precedential case a judge reject to decide the case upon the precedent whose ratio decidendi precedential rule embraces the case at hand There is also much room for some other usages of analogy in the province of precedential law One of them is resort to analogical reasoning while resolving the conflict between two or more precedents which all apply to the case at hand despite dictating different legal outcome for that case Analogy can also take part in ascertaining the contents of ratio decidendi deciding upon obsolete precedents or quoting precedents form other jurisdictions It is too visible in legal Education notably in the US the so called case method Restrictions Edit In legal matters sometimes the use of analogy is forbidden by the very law or common agreement between judges and scholars The most common instances concern criminal administrative and tax law Analogy should not be resorted to in criminal matters whenever its outcome would be unfavorable to the accused or suspect Such a ban finds its footing in the very principle nullum crimen nulla poena sine lege a principle which is understood in the way that there is no crime punishment unless it is expressly provided for in a statutory provision or an already existing judicial precedent Analogy should be applied with caution in the domain of tax law Here the principle nullum tributum sine lege justifies a general ban on the employment of analogy that would lead to an increase in taxation or whose results would for some other reason be to the detriment to the interests of taxpayers Extending by analogy those provisions of administrative law that restrict human rights and the rights of the citizens particularly the category of the so called individual rights or basic rights is as a rule prohibited Analogy generally should also not be resorted to in order to make the citizen s burdens and obligations larger or more vexatious The other limitations on the use of analogy in law among many others pertain to the analogical extension of statutory provisions that involve exceptions to more general statutory regulation or provisions this restriction flows from the well known especially in civil law continental legal systems Latin maxims exceptiones non sunt excendentae exception est strictissimae interpretationis and singularia non sunt extendenda the making of the use of an analogical argument with regard to those statutory provisions which comprise enumerations lists extending by analogy those statutory provisions that give impression that the Legislator intended to regulate some issues in an exclusive exhaustive manner such a manner is especially implied when the wording of a given statutory provision involves such pointers as only exclusively solely always never or which have a plain precise meaning In civil law analogy is permitted or required by law But also in this branch of law there are some restrictions confining the possible scope of the use of an analogical argument Such is for instance the prohibition to use analogy in relation to provisions regarding time limits or a general ban on the recourse to analogical arguments which lead to extension of those statutory provisions which envisage some obligations or burdens or which order mandate something The other examples concern the usage of analogy in the field of property law especially when one is going to create some new property rights by it or to extend these statutory provisions whose terms are unambiguous unequivocal and plain clear e g be of or under a certain age Teaching strategies Edit This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Analogies as defined in rhetoric are a comparison between words but an analogy can be used in teaching as well An analogy as used in teaching would be comparing a topic that students are already familiar with with a new topic that is being introduced so that students can get a better understanding of the topic and relate back to previous knowledge Shawn Glynn a professor in the department of educational psychology and instructional technology at the University of Georgia developed a theory on teaching with analogies and developed steps to explain the process of teaching with this method The steps for teaching with analogies are as follows Step one is introducing the new topic that is about to be taught and giving some general knowledge on the subject Step two is reviewing the concept that the students already know to ensure they have the proper knowledge to assess the similarities between the two concepts Step three is finding relevant features within the analogy of the two concepts Step four is finding similarities between the two concepts so students are able to compare and contrast them in order to understand Step five is indicating where the analogy breaks down between the two concepts And finally step six is drawing a conclusion about the analogy and comparison of the new material with the already learned material Typically this method is used to learn topics in science 36 In 1989 teacher Kerry Ruef began a program titled The Private Eye Project It is a method of teaching that revolves around using analogies in the classroom to better explain topics She thought of the idea to use analogies as a part of curriculum because she was observing objects once and she said my mind was noting what else each object reminded me of This led her to teach with the question what does the subject or topic remind you of The idea of comparing subjects and concepts led to the development of The Private Eye Project as a method of teaching 37 The program is designed to build critical thinking skills with analogies as one of the main themes revolving around it While Glynn focuses on using analogies to teach science The Private Eye Project can be used for any subject including writing math art social studies and invention It is now used by thousands of schools around the country 38 There are also various pedagogic innovations now emerging that use visual analogies for cross disciplinary teaching and research for instance between science and the humanities 39 Religion Edit Catholicism Edit The Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 taught For between creator and creature there can be noted no similarity so great that a greater dissimilarity cannot be seen between them 40 The theological exploration of this subject is called the analogia entis The consequence of this theory is that all true statements concerning God excluding the concrete details of Jesus earthly life are analogical and approximations without that implying any falsity Such analogical and true statements would include God is God is Love God is a consuming fire God is near to all who call him or God as Trinity where being love fire distance number must be classed as analogies that allow human cognition of what is infinitely beyond positive or negative language The use of theological statements in syllogisms must take into account their essential analogical character in that every analogy breaks down when stretched beyond its intended meaning Islam Edit Further information Qiyas Islamic jurisprudence makes ample use of analogy as a means of extrapolating from sources of law The bounds and rules employed to make analogical deduction vary greatly between madhabs and to a lesser extent individual scholars It is nonetheless a generally accepted source of law within jurisprudential epistemology with the chief opposition to it forming the dhahiri ostensiblist school See also EditArgumentum a contrario Argumentum a fortiori Case based reasoning Casuistry Commonsense reasoning Conceptual blending Duck test False analogy Hypocatastasis I know it when I see it Parable Sensemaking Metaphor Intuitive statisticsNotes Edit Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon revised and augmented throughout by Sir Henry Stuart Jones with the assistance of Roderick McKenzie Oxford Clarendon Press 1940 on Perseus Digital Library Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon ἀnalog ia Archived from the original on 2016 04 23 Retrieved 2018 05 21 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link analogy Online Etymology Dictionary Archived 2010 03 24 at the Wayback Machine Hofstadter in Gentner et al 2001 Journal of Statistics Education V11N2 Martin Archived from the original on 2013 03 07 Retrieved 2012 12 10 Michael A Martin The Use of Analogies and Heuristics in Teaching Introductory Statistical Methods Turney 2006 a b c Shelley 2003 Hallaq Wael B 1985 1986 The Logic of Legal Reasoning in Religious and Non Religious Cultures The Case of Islamic Law and the Common Law Cleveland State Law Review 34 79 96 93 5 Ruth Mas 1998 Qiyas A Study in Islamic Logic PDF Folia Orientalia 34 113 128 ISSN 0015 5675 Archived PDF from the original on 2008 07 08 John F Sowa Arun K Majumdar 2003 Analogical reasoning Conceptual Structures for Knowledge Creation and Communication Proceedings of ICCS 2003 Berlin Springer Verlag Archived from the original on 2010 04 05 pp 16 36 See Dedre Gentner et al 2001 See Gentner et al 2001 and Gentner s publication page Archived 2010 06 14 at the Wayback Machine Doumas Hummel and Sandhofer 2008 Keane M T and Brayshaw M 1988 The Incremental Analogical Machine a computational model of analogy In D Sleeman Ed European working session on learning pp 53 62 London Pitman Keane M T Ledgeway Duff S 1994 Constraints on analogical mapping a comparison of three models PDF Cognitive Science 18 3 387 438 doi 10 1016 0364 0213 94 90015 9 Keane M T 1997 What makes an analogy difficult The effects of order and causal structure in analogical mapping Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning Memory and Cognition 23 4 946 967 doi 10 1037 0278 7393 23 4 946 PMID 9231438 See Chalmers et al 1991 Forbus et al 1998 Morrison and Dietrich 1995 Gentner Dedre April 1983 Structure Mapping A Theoretical Framework for Analogy Cognitive Science 7 2 155 170 doi 10 1207 s15516709cog0702 3 S2CID 5371492 a b c d e f g Gentner Dedre 2006 Analogical Reasoning Psychology of Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science American Cancer Society doi 10 1002 0470018860 s00473 ISBN 978 0 470 01886 6 retrieved 2020 12 09 a b c d Gentner D Gunn V June 2001 Structural alignment facilitates the noticing of differences Memory amp Cognition 29 4 565 577 doi 10 3758 bf03200458 ISSN 0090 502X PMID 11504005 S2CID 1745309 a b c d e f g h i j k Gentner Dedre Smith Linsey A 2013 03 11 Reisberg Daniel ed Analogical Learning and Reasoning The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Psychology doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780195376746 001 0001 ISBN 9780195376746 Retrieved 2020 12 09 a b c Gentner Dedre Stevens Albert L 2014 01 14 Mental Models Psychology Press doi 10 4324 9781315802725 ISBN 978 1 315 80272 5 a b Clement Catherine A Gentner Dedre 1991 01 01 Systematicity as a selection constraint in analogical mapping Cognitive Science 15 1 89 132 doi 10 1016 0364 0213 91 80014 V ISSN 0364 0213 a b c d Gentner Dedre Hoyos Christian 2017 Analogy and Abstraction Topics in Cognitive Science 9 3 672 693 doi 10 1111 tops 12278 ISSN 1756 8765 PMID 28621480 a b c d e f Hespos Susan J Anderson Erin Gentner Dedre 2020 Childers Jane B ed Structure Mapping Processes Enable Infants Learning Across Domains Including Language Language and Concept Acquisition from Infancy Through Childhood Learning from Multiple Exemplars Cham Springer International Publishing pp 79 104 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 35594 4 5 ISBN 978 3 030 35594 4 S2CID 213450124 retrieved 2020 12 09 Christie Stella Gentner Dedre Call Josep Haun Daniel Benjamin Moritz February 2016 Sensitivity to Relational Similarity and Object Similarity in Apes and Children Current Biology 26 4 531 535 doi 10 1016 j cub 2015 12 054 ISSN 0960 9822 PMID 26853364 S2CID 17925163 a b Research and Education Association June 1994 2 Analogies In Fogiel M ed Verbal Tutor for the SAT Piscataway New Jersey Research amp Education Assoc pp 84 86 ISBN 978 0 87891 963 5 OCLC 32747316 Retrieved 25 January 2018 Schwartz Linda Heidrich Stanley H Heidrich Delana S 1 January 2007 Power Practice Analogies and Idioms eBook Huntington Beach Calif Creative Teaching Press pp 4 ISBN 978 1 59198 953 0 OCLC 232131611 Retrieved 25 January 2018 underwhelm definition of underwhelm in English Oxford Dictionaries Oxford Dictionaries English Archived from the original on 2016 08 16 Retrieved 2017 04 07 Going with the flow Using analogies to explain electric circuits Mark D Walker and David Garlovsky School Science Review 97 no 361 2016 51 58 https www academia edu 33380466 Going with the flow Using analogies to explain electric circuits Going with the flow Using analogies to explain electric circuits Phillips Steven Wilson William H July 2010 Categorial Compositionality A Category Theory Explanation for the Systematicity of Human Cognition PLOS Computational Biology 6 7 e1000858 Bibcode 2010PLSCB 6E0858P doi 10 1371 journal pcbi 1000858 PMC 2908697 PMID 20661306 Phillips Steven Wilson William H August 2011 Categorial Compositionality II Universal Constructions and a General Theory of Quasi Systematicity in Human Cognition PLOS Computational Biology 7 8 e1002102 Bibcode 2011PLSCB 7E2102P doi 10 1371 journal pcbi 1002102 PMC 3154512 PMID 21857816 Zhang Y Jatowt A Bhowmick S amp Tanaka K 2015 July Omnia mutantur nihil interit Connecting past with present by finding corresponding terms across time In Proceedings of the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics and the 7th International Joint Conference on Natural Language Processing Volume 1 Long Papers pp 645 655 pdf Zhang Yating Adam Jatowt and Katsumi Tanaka Towards understanding word embeddings Automatically explaining similarity of terms In 2016 IEEE international conference on big data big data pp 823 832 IEEE 2016 pdf Glynn Shawn M Teaching with Analogies 2008 Johnson Katie Educational Leadership Exploring the World with the Private Eye September 1995 16 October 2013 The Private Eye Project The Private Eye Project 2013 Mario Petrucci Crosstalk Mutation Chaos bridge building between the sciences and literary studies using Visual Analogy Archived from the original on 2013 09 25 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Fourth Lateran Council of 1215References EditCajetan Tommaso De Vio 1498 De Nominum Analogia P N Zammit ed 1934 The Analogy of Names Koren Henry J and Bushinski Edward A trans 1953 Pittsburgh Duquesne University Press Chalmers D J et al 1991 Chalmers D J French R M Hofstadter D High Level Perception Representation and Analogy Coelho Ivo 2010 Analogy ACPI Encyclopedia of Philosophy Ed Johnson J Puthenpurackal Bangalore ATC 1 64 68 Doumas L A A Hummel J E and Sandhofer C 2008 A Theory of the Discovery and Predication of Relational Concepts Psychological Review 115 1 43 Drescher F 2017 Analogy in Thomas Aquinas and Ludwig Wittgenstein A comparison New Blackfriars 99 1081 346 359 doi 10 1111 nbfr 12273 Forbus K et al 1998 Analogy just looks like high level perception Gentner D 1983 Structure mapping A theoretical framework for analogy Cognitive Science 7 155 170 Reprinted in A Collins amp E E Smith Eds Readings in cognitive science A perspective from psychology and artificial intelligence Palo Alto CA Kaufmann Gentner D Holyoak K J Kokinov B Eds 2001 The Analogical Mind Perspectives from Cognitive Science Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 0 262 57139 0 Hofstadter D 2001 Analogy as the Core of Cognition in Dedre Gentner Keith Holyoak and Boicho Kokinov eds The Analogical Mind Perspectives from Cognitive Science Cambridge MA The MIT Press 2001 pp 499 538 Holland J H Holyoak K J Nisbett R E and Thagard P 1986 Induction Processes of Inference Learning and Discovery Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 0 262 58096 9 Holyoak K J and Thagard P 1995 Mental Leaps Analogy in Creative Thought Cambridge MA MIT Press ISBN 0 262 58144 2 Holyoak K J and Thagard P 1997 The Analogical Mind Hummel J E and Holyoak K J 2005 Relational Reasoning in a Neurally Plausible Cognitive Architecture Itkonen E 2005 Analogy as Structure and Process Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing Company Juthe A 2005 Argument by Analogy in Argumentation 2005 19 1 27 Keane M T Ledgeway Duff S 1994 Constraints on analogical mapping a comparison of three models PDF Cognitive Science 18 3 287 334 doi 10 1016 0364 0213 94 90015 9 Keane M T 1997 What makes an analogy difficult The effects of order and causal structure in analogical mapping Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning Memory and Cognition 123 4 946 967 doi 10 1037 0278 7393 23 4 946 PMID 9231438 Lamond G 2006 Precedent and Analogy in Legal Reasoning in Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Langacker Ronald W 1987 Foundations of Cognitive grammar Vol I Theoretical prerequisites Stanford Stanford University Press Little J 2000 Analogy in Science Where Do We Go From Here Rhetoric Society Quarterly 30 69 92 doi 10 1080 02773940009391170 S2CID 145500740 Little J 2008 The Role of Analogy in George Gamow s Derivation of Drop Energy Technical Communication Quarterly 17 2 1 19 doi 10 1080 10572250701878876 S2CID 32910655 Melandri Enzo La linea e il circolo Studio logico filosofico sull analogia 1968 Quodlibet Macerata 2004 prefazione di Giorgio Agamben Morrison C and Dietrich E 1995 Structure Mapping vs High level Perception Pessali H Dalto F and Fernandez R 2015 Analogies we suffer by the case of the state as a household In Tae Hee Jo Zdravka Todorova Org Advancing the Frontiers of Heterodox Economics Essays in Honor of Frederic S Lee Nova Iorque Routledge p 281 295 Perelman Ch Olbrechts Tyteca L 1969 The New Rhetoric A Treatise on Argumentation Notre Dame 1969 Ross J F 1982 Portraying Analogy Cambridge Cambridge University Press Ross J F October 1970 Analogy and The Resolution of Some Cognitivity Problems The Journal of Philosophy 67 20 725 746 doi 10 2307 2024008 JSTOR 2024008 Ross J F September 1961 Analogy as a Rule of Meaning for Religious Language International Philosophical Quarterly 1 3 468 502 doi 10 5840 ipq19611356 Ross J F 1958 A Critical Analysis of the Theory of Analogy of St Thomas Aquinas Ann Arbor MI University Microfilms Inc Shelley C 2003 Multiple analogies in Science and Philosophy Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins Publishing Company Turney P D Littman M L 2005 Corpus based learning of analogies and semantic relations Machine Learning 60 1 3 251 278 arXiv cs 0508103 doi 10 1007 s10994 005 0913 1 S2CID 9322367 Turney P D 2006 Similarity of semantic relations Computational Linguistics 32 3 379 416 arXiv cs 0608100 doi 10 1162 coli 2006 32 3 379 S2CID 2468783 External links Edit Look up analogy in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Analogy Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Analogy and Analogical Reasoning by Paul Bartha Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Medieval Theories of Analogy by E Jennifer Ashworth Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Precedent and Analogy in Legal Reasoning by Grant Lamond Dictionary of the History of Ideas Analogy in Early Greek Thought Dictionary of the History of Ideas Analogy in Patristic and Medieval Thought Computational approaches to computing temporal analogy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Analogy amp oldid 1151150439, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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