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Reason

Reason is the capacity of applying logic consciously by drawing conclusions from new or existing information, with the aim of seeking the truth.[1] It is associated with such characteristically human activities as philosophy, religion, science, language, mathematics, and art, and is normally considered to be a distinguishing ability possessed by humans.[2][3] Reason is sometimes referred to as rationality.[4]

Reasoning involves using more-or-less rational processes of thinking and cognition to extrapolate from one's existing knowledge to generate new knowledge, and involves the use of one's intellect. The field of logic studies the ways in which humans can use formal reasoning to produce logically valid arguments and true conclusions.[5] Reasoning may be subdivided into forms of logical reasoning, such as deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning, and abductive reasoning.

Aristotle drew a distinction between logical discursive reasoning (reason proper), and intuitive reasoning,[6]: VI.7  in which the reasoning process through intuition—however valid—may tend toward the personal and the subjectively opaque. In some social and political settings logical and intuitive modes of reasoning may clash, while in other contexts intuition and formal reason are seen as complementary rather than adversarial. For example, in mathematics, intuition is often necessary for the creative processes involved with arriving at a formal proof, arguably the most difficult of formal reasoning tasks.

Reasoning, like habit or intuition, is one of the ways by which thinking moves from one idea to a related idea. For example, reasoning is the means by which rational individuals understand the significance of sensory information from their environments, or conceptualize abstract dichotomies such as cause and effect, truth and falsehood, or good and evil. Reasoning, as a part of executive decision making, is also closely identified with the ability to self-consciously change, in terms of goals, beliefs, attitudes, traditions, and institutions, and therefore with the capacity for freedom and self-determination.[7]

In contrast to the use of "reason" as an abstract noun, a reason is a consideration that either explains or justifies events, phenomena, or behavior.[8] Reasons justify decisions, reasons support explanations of natural phenomena, and reasons can be given to explain the actions (conduct) of individuals.

The words are connected in this way: Using reason, or reasoning, means providing good reasons. For example, when evaluating a moral decision, "morality is, at the very least, the effort to guide one's conduct by reason—that is, doing what there are the best reasons for doing—while giving equal [and impartial] weight to the interests of all those affected by what one does."[9]

Psychologists and cognitive scientists have attempted to study and explain how people reason, e.g. which cognitive and neural processes are engaged, and how cultural factors affect the inferences that people draw. The field of automated reasoning studies how reasoning may or may not be modeled computationally. Animal psychology considers the question of whether animals other than humans can reason.

Etymology and related words edit

In the English language and other modern European languages, "reason", and related words, represent words which have always been used to translate Latin and classical Greek terms in their philosophical sense.

  • The original Greek term was "λόγος" logos, the root of the modern English word "logic" but also a word that could mean for example "speech" or "explanation" or an "account" (of money handled).[10]
  • As a philosophical term logos was translated in its non-linguistic senses in Latin as ratio. This was originally not just a translation used for philosophy, but was also commonly a translation for logos in the sense of an account of money.[11]
  • French raison is derived directly from Latin, and this is the direct source of the English word "reason".[8]

The earliest major philosophers to publish in English, such as Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke also routinely wrote in Latin and French, and compared their terms to Greek, treating the words "logos", "ratio", "raison" and "reason" as interchangeable. The meaning of the word "reason" in senses such as "human reason" also overlaps to a large extent with "rationality" and the adjective of "reason" in philosophical contexts is normally "rational", rather than "reasoned" or "reasonable".[12] Some philosophers, Thomas Hobbes for example, also used the word ratiocination as a synonym for "reasoning".

Philosophical history edit

 
Francisco de Goya, The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters (El sueño de la razón produce monstruos), c. 1797

The proposal that reason gives humanity a special position in nature has been argued[citation needed] to be a defining characteristic of western philosophy and later western science, starting with classical Greece. Philosophy can be described as a way of life based upon reason, while reason has been among the major subjects of philosophical discussion since ancient times. Reason is often said to be reflexive, or "self-correcting", and the critique of reason has been a persistent theme in philosophy.[13]

Classical philosophy edit

For many classical philosophers, nature was understood teleologically, meaning that every type of thing had a definitive purpose that fit within a natural order that was itself understood to have aims. Perhaps starting with Pythagoras or Heraclitus, the cosmos was even said to have reason.[14] Reason, by this account, is not just a characteristic that people happen to have. Reason was considered of higher stature than other characteristics of human nature, because it is something people share with nature itself, linking an apparently immortal part of the human mind with the divine order of the cosmos. Within the human mind or soul (psyche), reason was described by Plato as being the natural monarch which should rule over the other parts, such as spiritedness (thumos) and the passions. Aristotle, Plato's student, defined human beings as rational animals, emphasizing reason as a characteristic of human nature. He described the highest human happiness or well being (eudaimonia) as a life which is lived consistently, excellently, and completely in accordance with reason.[6]: I

The conclusions to be drawn from the discussions of Aristotle and Plato on this matter are amongst the most debated in the history of philosophy.[15] But teleological accounts such as Aristotle's were highly influential for those who attempt to explain reason in a way that is consistent with monotheism and the immortality and divinity of the human soul. For example, in the neoplatonist account of Plotinus, the cosmos has one soul, which is the seat of all reason, and the souls of all people are part of this soul. Reason is for Plotinus both the provider of form to material things, and the light which brings people's souls back into line with their source.[16]

Christian and Islamic philosophy edit

The classical view of reason, like many important Neoplatonic and Stoic ideas, was readily adopted by the early Church[17] as the Church Fathers saw Greek Philosophy as an indispensable instrument given to mankind so that we may understand revelation.[18][verification needed] For example, the greatest among the early Church Fathers and Doctors of the Church such as Augustine of Hippo, Basil of Caesarea, and Gregory of Nyssa were as much Neoplatonic philosophers as they were Christian theologians, and they adopted the Neoplatonic view of human reason and its implications for our relationship to creation, to ourselves, and to God.

The Neoplatonic conception of the rational aspect of the human soul was widely adopted by medieval Islamic philosophers and continues to hold significance in Iranian philosophy.[15] As European intellectual life reemerged from the Dark Ages, the Christian Patristic tradition and the influence of esteemed Islamic scholars like Averroes and Avicenna contributed to the development of the Scholastic view of reason, which laid the foundation for our modern understanding of this concept.[19]

Among the Scholastics who relied on the classical concept of reason for the development of their doctrines, none were more influential than Saint Thomas Aquinas, who put this concept at the heart of his Natural Law. In this doctrine, Thomas concludes that because humans have reason and because reason is a spark of the divine, every single human life is invaluable, all humans are equal, and every human is born with an intrinsic and permanent set of basic rights.[20] On this foundation, the idea of human rights would later be constructed by Spanish theologians at the School of Salamanca.

Other Scholastics, such as Roger Bacon and Albertus Magnus, following the example of Islamic scholars such as Alhazen, emphasised reason an intrinsic human ability to decode the created order and the structures that underlie our experienced physical reality. This interpretation of reason was instrumental to the development of the scientific method in the early Universities of the high Middle Ages.[21]

Subject-centred reason in early modern philosophy edit

The early modern era was marked by a number of significant changes in the understanding of reason, starting in Europe. One of the most important of these changes involved a change in the metaphysical understanding of human beings. Scientists and philosophers began to question the teleological understanding of the world.[22] Nature was no longer assumed to be human-like, with its own aims or reason, and human nature was no longer assumed to work according to anything other than the same "laws of nature" which affect inanimate things. This new understanding eventually displaced the previous world view that derived from a spiritual understanding of the universe.

 
René Descartes

Accordingly, in the 17th century, René Descartes explicitly rejected the traditional notion of humans as "rational animals", suggesting instead that they are nothing more than "thinking things" along the lines of other "things" in nature. Any grounds of knowledge outside that understanding was, therefore, subject to doubt.

In his search for a foundation of all possible knowledge, Descartes decided to throw into doubt all knowledge—except that of the mind itself in the process of thinking:

At this time I admit nothing that is not necessarily true. I am therefore precisely nothing but a thinking thing; that is a mind, or intellect, or understanding, or reason—words of whose meanings I was previously ignorant.[23]

This eventually became known as epistemological or "subject-centred" reason, because it is based on the knowing subject, who perceives the rest of the world and itself as a set of objects to be studied, and successfully mastered, by applying the knowledge accumulated through such study. Breaking with tradition and with many thinkers after him, Descartes explicitly did not divide the incorporeal soul into parts, such as reason and intellect, describing them instead as one indivisible incorporeal entity.

A contemporary of Descartes, Thomas Hobbes described reason as a broader version of "addition and subtraction" which is not limited to numbers.[24] This understanding of reason is sometimes termed "calculative" reason. Similar to Descartes, Hobbes asserted that "No discourse whatsoever, can end in absolute knowledge of fact, past, or to come" but that "sense and memory" is absolute knowledge.[25]

In the late 17th century through the 18th century, John Locke and David Hume developed Descartes's line of thought still further. Hume took it in an especially skeptical direction, proposing that there could be no possibility of deducing relationships of cause and effect, and therefore no knowledge is based on reasoning alone, even if it seems otherwise.[26]

Hume famously remarked that, "We speak not strictly and philosophically when we talk of the combat of passion and of reason. Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them."[27] Hume also took his definition of reason to unorthodox extremes by arguing, unlike his predecessors, that human reason is not qualitatively different from either simply conceiving individual ideas, or from judgments associating two ideas,[28] and that "reason is nothing but a wonderful and unintelligible instinct in our souls, which carries us along a certain train of ideas, and endows them with particular qualities, according to their particular situations and relations."[29] It followed from this that animals have reason, only much less complex than human reason.

In the 18th century, Immanuel Kant attempted to show that Hume was wrong by demonstrating that a "transcendental" self, or "I", was a necessary condition of all experience. Therefore, suggested Kant, on the basis of such a self, it is in fact possible to reason both about the conditions and limits of human knowledge. And so long as these limits are respected, reason can be the vehicle of morality, justice, aesthetics, theories of knowledge (epistemology), and understanding.[citation needed]

Substantive and formal reason edit

In the formulation of Kant, who wrote some of the most influential modern treatises on the subject, the great achievement of reason (German: Vernunft) is that it is able to exercise a kind of universal law-making. Kant was able therefore to reformulate the basis of moral-practical, theoretical, and aesthetic reasoning on "universal" laws.

Here, practical reasoning is the self-legislating or self-governing formulation of universal norms, and theoretical reasoning is the way humans posit universal laws of nature.[30]

Under practical reason, the moral autonomy or freedom of people depends on their ability, by the proper exercise of that reason, to behave according to laws that are given to them. This contrasted with earlier forms of morality, which depended on religious understanding and interpretation, or on nature, for their substance.[31]

According to Kant, in a free society each individual must be able to pursue their goals however they see fit, as long as their actions conform to principles given by reason. He formulated such a principle, called the "categorical imperative", which would justify an action only if it could be universalized:

Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law.[32]

In contrast to Hume, Kant insisted that reason itself (German Vernunft) could be used to find solutions to metaphysical problems, especially the discovery of the foundations of morality. Kant claimed that these solutions could be found with his "transcendental logic", which unlike normal logic is not just an instrument that can be used indifferently, as it was for Aristotle, but a theoretical science in its own right and the basis of all the others.[33]

According to Jürgen Habermas, the "substantive unity" of reason has dissolved in modern times, such that it can no longer answer the question "How should I live?" Instead, the unity of reason has to be strictly formal, or "procedural". He thus described reason as a group of three autonomous spheres (on the model of Kant's three critiques):

Cognitive–instrumental reason
the kind of reason employed by the sciences; used to observe events, to predict and control outcomes, and to intervene in the world on the basis of its hypotheses
Moral–practical reason
what we use to deliberate and discuss issues in the moral and political realm, according to universalizable procedures (similar to Kant's categorical imperative)
Aesthetic reason
typically found in works of art and literature, and encompasses the novel ways of seeing the world and interpreting things that those practices embody

For Habermas, these three spheres are the domain of experts, and therefore need to be mediated with the "lifeworld" by philosophers. In drawing such a picture of reason, Habermas hoped to demonstrate that the substantive unity of reason, which in pre-modern societies had been able to answer questions about the good life, could be made up for by the unity of reason's formalizable procedures.[34]

The critique of reason edit

Hamann, Herder, Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault, Rorty, and many other philosophers have contributed to a debate about what reason means, or ought to mean. Some, like Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Rorty, are skeptical about subject-centred, universal, or instrumental reason, and even skeptical toward reason as a whole. Others, including Hegel, believe that it has obscured the importance of intersubjectivity, or "spirit" in human life, and they attempt to reconstruct a model of what reason should be.

Some thinkers, e.g. Foucault, believe there are other forms of reason, neglected but essential to modern life, and to our understanding of what it means to live a life according to reason.[13] Others suggest that there is not just one reason or rationality, but multiple possible systems of reason or rationality which may conflict (in which case there is no super-rational system one can appeal to in order to resolve the conflict).[35]

In the last several decades, a number of proposals have been made to "re-orient" this critique of reason, or to recognize the "other voices" or "new departments" of reason:

For example, in opposition to subject-centred reason, Habermas has proposed a model of communicative reason that sees it as an essentially cooperative activity, based on the fact of linguistic intersubjectivity.[36]

Nikolas Kompridis proposed a widely encompassing view of reason as "that ensemble of practices that contributes to the opening and preserving of openness" in human affairs, and a focus on reason's possibilities for social change.[37]

The philosopher Charles Taylor, influenced by the 20th century German philosopher Martin Heidegger, proposed that reason ought to include the faculty of disclosure, which is tied to the way we make sense of things in everyday life, as a new "department" of reason.[38]

In the essay "What is Enlightenment?", Michel Foucault proposed a critique based on Kant's distinction between "private" and "public" uses of reason:[39]

Private reason
the reason that is used when an individual is "a cog in a machine" or when one "has a role to play in society and jobs to do: to be a soldier, to have taxes to pay, to be in charge of a parish, to be a civil servant"
Public reason
the reason used "when one is reasoning as a reasonable being (and not as a cog in a machine), when one is reasoning as a member of reasonable humanity"; in these circumstances, "the use of reason must be free and public"

Reason compared to related concepts edit

Reason compared to logic edit

The terms logic or logical are sometimes used as if they were identical with reason or rational, or sometimes logic is seen as the most pure or the defining form of reason: "Logic is about reasoning—about going from premises to a conclusion. ... When you do logic, you try to clarify reasoning and separate good from bad reasoning."[40] In modern economics, rational choice is assumed to equate to logically consistent choice.[41]

However, reason and logic can be thought of as distinct—although logic is one important aspect of reason. Author Douglas Hofstadter, in Gödel, Escher, Bach, characterizes the distinction in this way: Logic is done inside a system while reason is done outside the system by such methods as skipping steps, working backward, drawing diagrams, looking at examples, or seeing what happens if you change the rules of the system.[42] Psychologists Mark H. Bickard and Robert L. Campbell argue that "rationality cannot be simply assimilated to logicality"; they note that "human knowledge of logic and logical systems has developed" over time through reasoning, and logical systems "can't construct new logical systems more powerful than themselves", so reasoning and rationality must involve more than a system of logic.[43][44] Psychologist David Moshman, citing Bickhard and Campbell, argues for a "metacognitive conception of rationality" in which a person's development of reason "involves increasing consciousness and control of logical and other inferences".[44][45]

Reason is a type of thought, and logic involves the attempt to describe a system of formal rules or norms of appropriate reasoning.[44] The oldest surviving writing to explicitly consider the rules by which reason operates are the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle, especially Prior Analytics and Posterior Analytics.[46][non-primary source needed] Although the Ancient Greeks had no separate word for logic as distinct from language and reason, Aristotle's newly coined word "syllogism" (syllogismos) identified logic clearly for the first time as a distinct field of study.[47] When Aristotle referred to "the logical" (hē logikē), he was referring more broadly to rational thought.[48]

Reason compared to cause-and-effect thinking, and symbolic thinking edit

As pointed out by philosophers such as Hobbes, Locke, and Hume, some animals are also clearly capable of a type of "associative thinking", even to the extent of associating causes and effects. A dog once kicked, can learn how to recognize the warning signs and avoid being kicked in the future, but this does not mean the dog has reason in any strict sense of the word. It also does not mean that humans acting on the basis of experience or habit are using their reason.[29]

Human reason requires more than being able to associate two ideas—even if those two ideas might be described by a reasoning human as a cause and an effect—perceptions of smoke, for example, and memories of fire. For reason to be involved, the association of smoke and the fire would have to be thought through in a way that can be explained, for example as cause and effect. In the explanation of Locke, for example, reason requires the mental use of a third idea in order to make this comparison by use of syllogism.[49]

More generally, according to Charles Sanders Peirce, reason in the strict sense requires the ability to create and manipulate a system of symbols, as well as indices and icons, the symbols having only a nominal, though habitual, connection to either (for example) smoke or fire.[50] One example of such a system of symbols and signs is language.

The connection of reason to symbolic thinking has been expressed in different ways by philosophers. Thomas Hobbes described the creation of "Markes, or Notes of remembrance" as speech.[51] He used the word speech as an English version of the Greek word logos so that speech did not need to be communicated.[52] When communicated, such speech becomes language, and the marks or notes or remembrance are called "Signes" by Hobbes. Going further back, although Aristotle is a source of the idea that only humans have reason (logos), he does mention that animals with imagination, for whom sense perceptions can persist, come closest to having something like reasoning and nous, and even uses the word "logos" in one place to describe the distinctions which animals can perceive in such cases.[53]

Reason, imagination, mimesis, and memory edit

Reason and imagination rely on similar mental processes.[54] Imagination is not only found in humans. Aristotle asserted that phantasia (imagination: that which can hold images or phantasmata) and phronein (a type of thinking that can judge and understand in some sense) also exist in some animals.[55] According to him, both are related to the primary perceptive ability of animals, which gathers the perceptions of different senses and defines the order of the things that are perceived without distinguishing universals, and without deliberation or logos. But this is not yet reason, because human imagination is different.

Terrence Deacon and Merlin Donald, writing about the origin of language, connect reason not only to language, but also mimesis.[56] They describe the ability to create language as part of an internal modeling of reality, and specific to humankind. Other results are consciousness, and imagination or fantasy. In contrast, modern proponents of a genetic predisposition to language itself include Noam Chomsky and Steven Pinker.[clarification needed]

If reason is symbolic thinking, and peculiarly human, then this implies that humans have a special ability to maintain a clear consciousness of the distinctness of "icons" or images and the real things they represent. Merlin Donald writes:[57]: 172 

A dog might perceive the "meaning" of a fight that was realistically play-acted by humans, but it could not reconstruct the message or distinguish the representation from its referent (a real fight).... Trained apes are able to make this distinction; young children make this distinction early—hence, their effortless distinction between play-acting an event and the event itself

In classical descriptions, an equivalent description of this mental faculty is eikasia, in the philosophy of Plato.[58]: Ch.5  This is the ability to perceive whether a perception is an image of something else, related somehow but not the same, and therefore allows humans to perceive that a dream or memory or a reflection in a mirror is not reality as such. What Klein refers to as dianoetic eikasia is the eikasia concerned specifically with thinking and mental images, such as those mental symbols, icons, signes, and marks discussed above as definitive of reason. Explaining reason from this direction: human thinking is special in that we often understand visible things as if they were themselves images of our intelligible "objects of thought" as "foundations" (hypothēses in Ancient Greek). This thinking (dianoia) is "...an activity which consists in making the vast and diffuse jungle of the visible world depend on a plurality of more 'precise' noēta".[58]: 122 

Both Merlin Donald and the Socratic authors such as Plato and Aristotle emphasize the importance of mimēsis, often translated as imitation or representation. Donald writes:[57]: 169 

Imitation is found especially in monkeys and apes [...but...] Mimesis is fundamentally different from imitation and mimicry in that it involves the invention of intentional representations.... Mimesis is not absolutely tied to external communication.

Mimēsis is a concept, now popular again in academic discussion, that was particularly prevalent in Plato's works. In Aristotle, it is discussed mainly in the Poetics. In Michael Davis's account of the theory of man in that work:[59]

It is the distinctive feature of human action, that whenever we choose what we do, we imagine an action for ourselves as though we were inspecting it from the outside. Intentions are nothing more than imagined actions, internalizings of the external. All action is therefore imitation of action; it is poetic...[60]

Donald like Plato (and Aristotle, especially in On Memory and Recollection), emphasizes the peculiarity in humans of voluntary initiation of a search through one's mental world. The ancient Greek anamnēsis, normally translated as "recollection" was opposed to mneme or "memory". Memory, shared with some animals,[61] requires a consciousness not only of what happened in the past, but also that something happened in the past, which is in other words a kind of eikasia[58]: 109  "...but nothing except man is able to recollect."[62] Recollection is a deliberate effort to search for and recapture something once known. Klein writes that, "To become aware of our having forgotten something means to begin recollecting."[58]: 112  Donald calls the same thing autocueing, which he explains as follows:[57]: 173 [63] "Mimetic acts are reproducible on the basis of internal, self-generated cues. This permits voluntary recall of mimetic representations, without the aid of external cues—probably the earliest form of representational thinking."

In a celebrated paper, the fantasy author and philologist J.R.R. Tolkien wrote in his essay "On Fairy Stories" that the terms "fantasy" and "enchantment" are connected to not only "the satisfaction of certain primordial human desires" but also "the origin of language and of the mind".[This quote needs a citation]

Logical reasoning methods and argumentation edit

A subdivision of philosophy and a variety of reasoning is logic. The traditional main division made in philosophy is between deductive reasoning and inductive reasoning. Formal logic has been described as the science of deduction.[64] The study of inductive reasoning is generally carried out within the field known as informal logic or critical thinking.

Deductive reasoning edit

Deduction is a form of reasoning in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the stated premises. A deduction is also the name for the conclusion reached by a deductive reasoning process. A classic example of deductive reasoning is evident in syllogisms like the following:

Premise 1 All humans are mortal.
Premise 2 Socrates is a human.
Conclusion Socrates is mortal.

The reasoning in this argument is deductively valid because there is no way in which both premises could be true and the conclusion be false.

Inductive reasoning edit

Induction is a form of inference that produces properties or relations about unobserved objects or types based on previous observations or experiences, or that formulates general statements or laws based on limited observations of recurring phenomenal patterns.

Inductive reasoning contrasts with deductive reasoning in that, even in the strongest cases of inductive reasoning, the truth of the premises does not guarantee the truth of the conclusion. Instead, the conclusion of an inductive argument follows with some degree of probability. For this reason also, the conclusion of an inductive argument contains more information than is already contained in the premises. Thus, this method of reasoning is ampliative.

A classic example of inductive reasoning comes from the empiricist David Hume:

Premise The sun has risen in the east every morning up until now.
Conclusion The sun will also rise in the east tomorrow.

Analogical reasoning edit

Analogical reasoning is a form of inductive reasoning from a particular to a particular. It is often used in case-based reasoning, especially legal reasoning.[65] An example follows:

Premise 1 Socrates is human and mortal.
Premise 2 Plato is human.
Conclusion Plato is mortal.

Analogical reasoning is a weaker form of inductive reasoning from a single example, because inductive reasoning typically uses a large number of examples to reason from the particular to the general.[66] Analogical reasoning often leads to wrong conclusions. For example:

Premise 1 Socrates is human and male.
Premise 2 Ada Lovelace is human.
Conclusion Ada Lovelace is male.

Abductive reasoning edit

Abductive reasoning, or argument to the best explanation, is a form of reasoning that does not fit in either the deductive or inductive categories, since it starts with incomplete set of observations and proceeds with likely possible explanations. The conclusion in an abductive argument does not follow with certainty from its premises and concerns something unobserved. What distinguishes abduction from the other forms of reasoning is an attempt to favour one conclusion above others, by subjective judgement or by attempting to falsify alternative explanations or by demonstrating the likelihood of the favoured conclusion, given a set of more or less disputable assumptions. For example, when a patient displays certain symptoms, there might be various possible causes, but one of these is preferred above others as being more probable.

Fallacious reasoning edit

Flawed reasoning in arguments is known as fallacious reasoning. Bad reasoning within arguments can result from either a formal fallacy or an informal fallacy.

Formal fallacies occur when there is a problem with the form, or structure, of the argument. The word "formal" refers to this link to the form of the argument. An argument that contains a formal fallacy will always be invalid.

An informal fallacy is an error in reasoning that occurs due to a problem with the content, rather than the form or structure, of the argument.

Traditional problems raised concerning reason edit

Philosophy is often characterized as a pursuit of rational understanding, entailing a more rigorous and dedicated application of human reasoning than commonly employed. Philosophers have long debated two fundamental questions regarding reason, essentially examining reasoning itself as a human endeavor, or philosophizing about philosophizing. The first question delves into whether we can place our trust in reason's ability to attain knowledge and truth more effectively than alternative methods. The second question explores whether a life guided by reason, a life that aims to be guided by reason, can be expected to lead to greater happiness compared to other approaches to life.

Reason versus truth, and "first principles" edit

Since classical antiquity a question has remained constant in philosophical debate (sometimes seen as a conflict between Platonism and Aristotelianism) concerning the role of reason in confirming truth. People use logic, deduction, and induction to reach conclusions they think are true. Conclusions reached in this way are considered, according to Aristotle, more certain than sense perceptions on their own.[67] On the other hand, if such reasoned conclusions are only built originally upon a foundation of sense perceptions, then our most logical conclusions can never be said to be certain because they are built upon the very same fallible perceptions they seek to better.[68]

This leads to the question of what types of first principles, or starting points of reasoning, are available for someone seeking to come to true conclusions. In Greek, "first principles" are archai, "starting points",[69] and the faculty used to perceive them is sometimes referred to in Aristotle[70] and Plato[71] as nous which was close in meaning to awareness or consciousness.[72]

Empiricism (sometimes associated with Aristotle[73] but more correctly associated with British philosophers such as John Locke and David Hume, as well as their ancient equivalents such as Democritus) asserts that sensory impressions are the only available starting points for reasoning and attempting to attain truth. This approach always leads to the controversial conclusion that absolute knowledge is not attainable. Idealism, (associated with Plato and his school), claims that there is a "higher" reality, within which certain people can directly discover truth without needing to rely only upon the senses, and that this higher reality is therefore the primary source of truth.

Philosophers such as Plato, Aristotle, Al-Farabi, Avicenna, Averroes, Maimonides, Aquinas, and Hegel are sometimes said[by whom?] to have argued that reason must be fixed and discoverable—perhaps by dialectic, analysis, or study. In the vision of these thinkers, reason is divine or at least has divine attributes. Such an approach allowed religious philosophers such as Thomas Aquinas and Étienne Gilson to try to show that reason and revelation are compatible. According to Hegel, "...the only thought which Philosophy brings with it to the contemplation of History, is the simple conception of reason; that reason is the Sovereign of the World; that the history of the world, therefore, presents us with a rational process."[74]

Since the 17th century rationalists, reason has often been taken to be a subjective faculty, or rather the unaided ability (pure reason) to form concepts. For Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz, this was associated with mathematics. Kant attempted to show that pure reason could form concepts (time and space) that are the conditions of experience. Kant made his argument in opposition to Hume, who denied that reason had any role to play in experience.

Reason versus emotion or passion edit

After Plato and Aristotle, western literature often treated reason as being the faculty that trained the passions and appetites.[citation needed] Stoic philosophy, by contrast, claimed most emotions were merely false judgements.[75][76] According to the Stoics the only good is virtue, and the only evil is vice, therefore emotions that judged things other than vice to be bad (such as fear or distress), or things other than virtue to be good (such as greed) were simply false judgements and should be discarded (though positive emotions based on true judgements, such as kindness, were acceptable).[75][76][77] After the critiques of reason in the early Enlightenment the appetites were rarely discussed or were conflated with the passions.[citation needed] Some Enlightenment camps took after the Stoics to say reason should oppose passion rather than order it, while others like the Romantics believed that passion displaces reason, as in the maxim "follow your heart".[citation needed]

Reason has been seen as cold, an "enemy of mystery and ambiguity",[78] a slave, or judge, of the passions, notably in the work of David Hume, and more recently of Freud.[citation needed]

Reasoning that claims the object of a desire is demanded by logic alone is called rationalization.[citation needed]

Rousseau first proposed, in his second Discourse, that reason and political life is not natural and is possibly harmful to mankind.[79] He asked what really can be said about what is natural to mankind. What, other than reason and civil society, "best suits his constitution"? Rousseau saw "two principles prior to reason" in human nature. First we hold an intense interest in our own well-being. Secondly we object to the suffering or death of any sentient being, especially one like ourselves.[80] These two passions lead us to desire more than we could achieve. We become dependent upon each other, and on relationships of authority and obedience. This effectively puts the human race into slavery. Rousseau says that he almost dares to assert that nature does not destine men to be healthy. According to Richard Velkley, "Rousseau outlines certain programs of rational self-correction, most notably the political legislation of the Contrat Social and the moral education in Émile. All the same, Rousseau understands such corrections to be only ameliorations of an essentially unsatisfactory condition, that of socially and intellectually corrupted humanity."[This quote needs a citation]

This quandary presented by Rousseau led to Kant's new way of justifying reason as freedom to create good and evil. These therefore are not to be blamed on nature or God. In various ways, German Idealism after Kant, and major later figures such Nietzsche, Bergson, Husserl, Scheler, and Heidegger, remain preoccupied with problems coming from the metaphysical demands or urges of reason.[81] Rousseau and these later writers also exerted a large influence on art and politics. Many writers (such as Nikos Kazantzakis) extol passion and disparage reason. In politics modern nationalism comes from Rousseau's argument that rationalist cosmopolitanism brings man ever further from his natural state.[82]

In Descartes' Error, Antonio Damasio presents the "Somatic Marker Hypothesis" which states that emotions guide behavior and decision-making. Damasio argues that these somatic markers (known collectively as "gut feelings") are "intuitive signals" that direct our decision making processes in a certain way that cannot be solved with rationality alone. Damasio further argues that rationality requires emotional input in order to function.

Reason versus faith or tradition edit

There are many religious traditions, some of which are explicitly fideist and others of which claim varying degrees of rationalism. Secular critics sometimes accuse all religious adherents of irrationality; they claim such adherents are guilty of ignoring, suppressing, or forbidding some kinds of reasoning concerning some subjects (such as religious dogmas, moral taboos, etc.).[83] Though theologies and religions such as classical monotheism typically do not admit to being irrational, there is often a perceived conflict or tension between faith and tradition on the one hand, and reason on the other, as potentially competing sources of wisdom, law, and truth.[72][84]

Religious adherents sometimes respond by arguing that faith and reason can be reconciled, or have different non-overlapping domains, or that critics engage in a similar kind of irrationalism:

Reconciliation
Philosopher Alvin Plantinga argues that there is no real conflict between reason and classical theism because classical theism explains (among other things) why the universe is intelligible and why reason can successfully grasp it.[85]
Non-overlapping magisteria
Evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould argues that there need not be conflict between reason and religious belief because they are each authoritative in their own domain (or "magisterium").[86] If so, reason can work on those problems over which it has authority while other sources of knowledge or opinion can have authority on the big questions.[87]
Tu quoque
Philosophers Alasdair MacIntyre and Charles Taylor argue that those critics of traditional religion who are adherents of secular liberalism are also sometimes guilty of ignoring, suppressing, and forbidding some kinds of reasoning about subjects.[88] Similarly, philosophers of science such as Paul Feyarabend argue that scientists sometimes ignore or suppress evidence contrary to the dominant paradigm.
Unification
Theologian Joseph Ratzinger, later Benedict XVI, asserted that "Christianity has understood itself as the religion of the Logos, as the religion according to reason," referring to John 1 Ἐν ἀρχῇ ἦν ὁ λόγος, usually translated as "In the beginning was the Word (Logos)." Thus, he said that the Christian faith is "open to all that is truly rational", and that the rationality of Western Enlightenment "is of Christian origin".[89]

Some commentators have claimed that Western civilization can be almost defined by its serious testing of the limits of tension between "unaided" reason and faith in "revealed" truths—figuratively summarized as Athens and Jerusalem, respectively.[90] Leo Strauss spoke of a "Greater West" that included all areas under the influence of the tension between Greek rationalism and Abrahamic revelation, including the Muslim lands. He was particularly influenced by the Muslim philosopher Al-Farabi. To consider to what extent Eastern philosophy might have partaken of these important tensions, Strauss thought it best to consider whether dharma or tao may be equivalent to Nature (physis in Greek). According to Strauss the beginning of philosophy involved the "discovery or invention of nature" and the "pre-philosophical equivalent of nature" was supplied by "such notions as 'custom' or 'ways'", which appear to be really universal in all times and places. The philosophical concept of nature or natures as a way of understanding archai (first principles of knowledge) brought about a peculiar tension between reasoning on the one hand, and tradition or faith on the other.[72]

Although there is this history of debate concerning reason and faith in the Islamic, Christian, and Jewish traditions, the pursuit of reason is sometimes argued to be compatible with the other practice of other religions of a different nature, such as Hinduism, because they do not define their tenets in such an absolute way.[91]

Reason in particular fields of study edit

Psychology and cognitive science edit

Scientific research into reasoning is carried out within the fields of psychology and cognitive science. Psychologists attempt to determine whether or not people are capable of rational thought in a number of different circumstances.

Assessing how well someone engages in reasoning is the project of determining the extent to which the person is rational or acts rationally. It is a key research question in the psychology of reasoning and cognitive science of reasoning. Rationality is often divided into its respective theoretical and practical counterparts.

Behavioral experiments on human reasoning edit

Experimental cognitive psychologists carry out research on reasoning behaviour. Such research may focus, for example, on how people perform on tests of reasoning such as intelligence or IQ tests, or on how well people's reasoning matches ideals set by logic (see, for example, the Wason test).[92] Experiments examine how people make inferences from conditionals like if A then B and how they make inferences about alternatives like A or else B.[93] They test whether people can make valid deductions about spatial and temporal relations like A is to the left of B or A happens after B, and about quantified assertions like all the A are B.[94] Experiments investigate how people make inferences about factual situations, hypothetical possibilities, probabilities, and counterfactual situations.[95]

Developmental studies of children's reasoning edit

Developmental psychologists investigate the development of reasoning from birth to adulthood. Piaget's theory of cognitive development was the first complete theory of reasoning development. Subsequently, several alternative theories were proposed, including the neo-Piagetian theories of cognitive development.[96]

Neuroscience of reasoning edit

The biological functioning of the brain is studied by neurophysiologists, cognitive neuroscientists, and neuropsychologists. This includes research into the structure and function of normally functioning brains, and of damaged or otherwise unusual brains. In addition to carrying out research into reasoning, some psychologists—for example clinical psychologists and psychotherapists—work to alter people's reasoning habits when those habits are unhelpful.

Computer science edit

Automated reasoning edit

In artificial intelligence and computer science, scientists study and use automated reasoning for diverse applications including automated theorem proving the formal semantics of programming languages, and formal specification in software engineering.

Meta-reasoning edit

Meta-reasoning is reasoning about reasoning. In computer science, a system performs meta-reasoning when it is reasoning about its own operation.[97] This requires a programming language capable of reflection, the ability to observe and modify its own structure and behaviour.

Evolution of reason edit

 
Dan Sperber believes that reasoning in groups is more effective and promotes their evolutionary fitness.

A species could benefit greatly from better abilities to reason about, predict, and understand the world. French social and cognitive scientists Dan Sperber and Hugo Mercier argue that, aside from these benefits, there could have been other forces driving the evolution of reason. They point out that reasoning is very difficult for humans to do effectively, and that it is hard for individuals to doubt their own beliefs (confirmation bias). Reasoning is most effective when it is done as a collective—as demonstrated by the success of projects like science. They suggest that there are not just individual, but group selection pressures at play. Any group that managed to find ways of reasoning effectively would reap benefits for all its members, increasing their fitness. This could also help explain why humans, according to Sperber, are not optimized to reason effectively alone. Sperber's & Mercier's argumentative theory of reasoning claims that reason may have more to do with winning arguments than with the search for the truth.[98]

Reason in political philosophy and ethics edit

Aristotle famously described reason (with language) as a part of human nature, because of which it is best for humans to live "politically" meaning in communities of about the size and type of a small city state (polis in Greek). For example:

It is clear, then, that a human being is more of a political politikon = of the polis] animal [zōion] than is any bee or than any of those animals that live in herds. For nature, as we say, makes nothing in vain, and humans are the only animals who possess reasoned speech [logos]. Voice, of course, serves to indicate what is painful and pleasant; that is why it is also found in other animals, because their nature has reached the point where they can perceive what is painful and pleasant and express these to each other. But speech [logos] serves to make plain what is advantageous and harmful and so also what is just and unjust. For it is a peculiarity of humans, in contrast to the other animals, to have perception of good and bad, just and unjust, and the like; and the community in these things makes a household or city [polis].... By nature, then, the drive for such a community exists in everyone, but the first to set one up is responsible for things of very great goodness. For as humans are the best of all animals when perfected, so they are the worst when divorced from law and right. The reason is that injustice is most difficult to deal with when furnished with weapons, and the weapons a human being has are meant by nature to go along with prudence and virtue, but it is only too possible to turn them to contrary uses. Consequently, if a human being lacks virtue, he is the most unholy and savage thing, and when it comes to sex and food, the worst. But justice is something political [to do with the polis], for right is the arrangement of the political community, and right is discrimination of what is just.[99]: I.2, 1253a 

If human nature is fixed in this way, we can define what type of community is always best for people. This argument has remained a central argument in all political, ethical, and moral thinking since then, and has become especially controversial since firstly Rousseau's Second Discourse, and secondly, the Theory of Evolution. Already in Aristotle there was an awareness that the polis had not always existed and had to be invented or developed by humans themselves. The household came first, and the first villages and cities were just extensions of that, with the first cities being run as if they were still families with Kings acting like fathers.[99]: I.2, 1252b15 

Friendship seems to prevail in man and woman according to nature [kata phusin]; for people are by nature [tēi phusei] pairing more than political [politikon], in as much as the household [oikos] is prior and more necessary than the polis and making children is more common [koinoteron] with the animals. In the other animals, community [koinōnia] goes no further than this, but people live together [sumoikousin] not only for the sake of making children, but also for the things for life; for from the start the functions [erga] are divided, and are different for man and woman. Thus they supply each other, putting their own into the common [eis to koinon]. It is for these reasons that both utility and pleasure seem to be found in this kind of friendship.[6]: VIII.12 

Rousseau in his Second Discourse finally took the shocking step of claiming that this traditional account has things in reverse: with reason, language, and rationally organized communities all having developed over a long period of time merely as a result of the fact that some habits of cooperation were found to solve certain types of problems, and that once such cooperation became more important, it forced people to develop increasingly complex cooperation—often only to defend themselves from each other.

In other words, according to Rousseau, reason, language, and rational community did not arise because of any conscious decision or plan by humans or gods, nor because of any pre-existing human nature. As a result, he claimed, living together in rationally organized communities like modern humans is a development with many negative aspects compared to the original state of man as an ape. If anything is specifically human in this theory, it is the flexibility and adaptability of humans. This view of the animal origins of distinctive human characteristics later received support from Charles Darwin's Theory of Evolution.

The two competing theories concerning the origins of reason are relevant to political and ethical thought because, according to the Aristotelian theory, a best way of living together exists independently of historical circumstances. According to Rousseau, we should even doubt that reason, language, and politics are a good thing, as opposed to being simply the best option given the particular course of events that led to today. Rousseau's theory, that human nature is malleable rather than fixed, is often taken to imply (for example by Karl Marx) a wider range of possible ways of living together than traditionally known.

However, while Rousseau's initial impact encouraged bloody revolutions against traditional politics, including both the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution, his own conclusions about the best forms of community seem to have been remarkably classical, in favor of city-states such as Geneva, and rural living.

See also edit

  • Argument – Attempt to persuade or to determine the truth of a conclusion
  • Argumentation theory – Study of how conclusions are reached through logical reasoning; one of four rhetorical modes
  • Common sense – Sound practical judgement in everyday matters
  • Confirmation bias – Bias confirming existing attitudes
  • Conformity – Matching opinions and behaviors to group norms
  • Critical thinking – Analysis of facts to form a judgment
  • Logic and rationality – Fundamental concepts in philosophy
  • Outline of thought – Topic tree that identifies many types of thoughts/thinking, types of reasoning, aspects of thought, related fields, and more
  • Outline of human intelligence – Topic tree presenting the traits, capacities, models, and research fields of human intelligence, and more
  • Transduction (psychology) – generalization of attributes from specific examples of a category to the whole category

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Further reading edit

reason, this, article, about, human, faculty, reason, rationality, other, uses, disambiguation, capacity, applying, logic, consciously, drawing, conclusions, from, existing, information, with, seeking, truth, associated, with, such, characteristically, human, . This article is about the human faculty of reason and rationality For other uses see Reason disambiguation Reason is the capacity of applying logic consciously by drawing conclusions from new or existing information with the aim of seeking the truth 1 It is associated with such characteristically human activities as philosophy religion science language mathematics and art and is normally considered to be a distinguishing ability possessed by humans 2 3 Reason is sometimes referred to as rationality 4 Reasoning involves using more or less rational processes of thinking and cognition to extrapolate from one s existing knowledge to generate new knowledge and involves the use of one s intellect The field of logic studies the ways in which humans can use formal reasoning to produce logically valid arguments and true conclusions 5 Reasoning may be subdivided into forms of logical reasoning such as deductive reasoning inductive reasoning and abductive reasoning Aristotle drew a distinction between logical discursive reasoning reason proper and intuitive reasoning 6 VI 7 in which the reasoning process through intuition however valid may tend toward the personal and the subjectively opaque In some social and political settings logical and intuitive modes of reasoning may clash while in other contexts intuition and formal reason are seen as complementary rather than adversarial For example in mathematics intuition is often necessary for the creative processes involved with arriving at a formal proof arguably the most difficult of formal reasoning tasks Reasoning like habit or intuition is one of the ways by which thinking moves from one idea to a related idea For example reasoning is the means by which rational individuals understand the significance of sensory information from their environments or conceptualize abstract dichotomies such as cause and effect truth and falsehood or good and evil Reasoning as a part of executive decision making is also closely identified with the ability to self consciously change in terms of goals beliefs attitudes traditions and institutions and therefore with the capacity for freedom and self determination 7 In contrast to the use of reason as an abstract noun a reason is a consideration that either explains or justifies events phenomena or behavior 8 Reasons justify decisions reasons support explanations of natural phenomena and reasons can be given to explain the actions conduct of individuals The words are connected in this way Using reason or reasoning means providing good reasons For example when evaluating a moral decision morality is at the very least the effort to guide one s conduct by reason that is doing what there are the best reasons for doing while giving equal and impartial weight to the interests of all those affected by what one does 9 Psychologists and cognitive scientists have attempted to study and explain how people reason e g which cognitive and neural processes are engaged and how cultural factors affect the inferences that people draw The field of automated reasoning studies how reasoning may or may not be modeled computationally Animal psychology considers the question of whether animals other than humans can reason Contents 1 Etymology and related words 2 Philosophical history 2 1 Classical philosophy 2 2 Christian and Islamic philosophy 2 3 Subject centred reason in early modern philosophy 2 4 Substantive and formal reason 2 5 The critique of reason 3 Reason compared to related concepts 3 1 Reason compared to logic 3 2 Reason compared to cause and effect thinking and symbolic thinking 3 3 Reason imagination mimesis and memory 3 4 Logical reasoning methods and argumentation 3 4 1 Deductive reasoning 3 4 2 Inductive reasoning 3 4 3 Analogical reasoning 3 4 4 Abductive reasoning 3 4 5 Fallacious reasoning 4 Traditional problems raised concerning reason 4 1 Reason versus truth and first principles 4 2 Reason versus emotion or passion 4 3 Reason versus faith or tradition 5 Reason in particular fields of study 5 1 Psychology and cognitive science 5 1 1 Behavioral experiments on human reasoning 5 1 2 Developmental studies of children s reasoning 5 1 3 Neuroscience of reasoning 5 2 Computer science 5 2 1 Automated reasoning 5 2 2 Meta reasoning 5 3 Evolution of reason 5 4 Reason in political philosophy and ethics 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingEtymology and related words editIn the English language and other modern European languages reason and related words represent words which have always been used to translate Latin and classical Greek terms in their philosophical sense The original Greek term was logos logos the root of the modern English word logic but also a word that could mean for example speech or explanation or an account of money handled 10 As a philosophical term logos was translated in its non linguistic senses in Latin as ratio This was originally not just a translation used for philosophy but was also commonly a translation for logos in the sense of an account of money 11 French raison is derived directly from Latin and this is the direct source of the English word reason 8 The earliest major philosophers to publish in English such as Francis Bacon Thomas Hobbes and John Locke also routinely wrote in Latin and French and compared their terms to Greek treating the words logos ratio raison and reason as interchangeable The meaning of the word reason in senses such as human reason also overlaps to a large extent with rationality and the adjective of reason in philosophical contexts is normally rational rather than reasoned or reasonable 12 Some philosophers Thomas Hobbes for example also used the word ratiocination as a synonym for reasoning Philosophical history edit nbsp Francisco de Goya The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters El sueno de la razon produce monstruos c 1797The proposal that reason gives humanity a special position in nature has been argued citation needed to be a defining characteristic of western philosophy and later western science starting with classical Greece Philosophy can be described as a way of life based upon reason while reason has been among the major subjects of philosophical discussion since ancient times Reason is often said to be reflexive or self correcting and the critique of reason has been a persistent theme in philosophy 13 Classical philosophy edit For many classical philosophers nature was understood teleologically meaning that every type of thing had a definitive purpose that fit within a natural order that was itself understood to have aims Perhaps starting with Pythagoras or Heraclitus the cosmos was even said to have reason 14 Reason by this account is not just a characteristic that people happen to have Reason was considered of higher stature than other characteristics of human nature because it is something people share with nature itself linking an apparently immortal part of the human mind with the divine order of the cosmos Within the human mind or soul psyche reason was described by Plato as being the natural monarch which should rule over the other parts such as spiritedness thumos and the passions Aristotle Plato s student defined human beings as rational animals emphasizing reason as a characteristic of human nature He described the highest human happiness or well being eudaimonia as a life which is lived consistently excellently and completely in accordance with reason 6 I The conclusions to be drawn from the discussions of Aristotle and Plato on this matter are amongst the most debated in the history of philosophy 15 But teleological accounts such as Aristotle s were highly influential for those who attempt to explain reason in a way that is consistent with monotheism and the immortality and divinity of the human soul For example in the neoplatonist account of Plotinus the cosmos has one soul which is the seat of all reason and the souls of all people are part of this soul Reason is for Plotinus both the provider of form to material things and the light which brings people s souls back into line with their source 16 Christian and Islamic philosophy edit The classical view of reason like many important Neoplatonic and Stoic ideas was readily adopted by the early Church 17 as the Church Fathers saw Greek Philosophy as an indispensable instrument given to mankind so that we may understand revelation 18 verification needed For example the greatest among the early Church Fathers and Doctors of the Church such as Augustine of Hippo Basil of Caesarea and Gregory of Nyssa were as much Neoplatonic philosophers as they were Christian theologians and they adopted the Neoplatonic view of human reason and its implications for our relationship to creation to ourselves and to God The Neoplatonic conception of the rational aspect of the human soul was widely adopted by medieval Islamic philosophers and continues to hold significance in Iranian philosophy 15 As European intellectual life reemerged from the Dark Ages the Christian Patristic tradition and the influence of esteemed Islamic scholars like Averroes and Avicenna contributed to the development of the Scholastic view of reason which laid the foundation for our modern understanding of this concept 19 Among the Scholastics who relied on the classical concept of reason for the development of their doctrines none were more influential than Saint Thomas Aquinas who put this concept at the heart of his Natural Law In this doctrine Thomas concludes that because humans have reason and because reason is a spark of the divine every single human life is invaluable all humans are equal and every human is born with an intrinsic and permanent set of basic rights 20 On this foundation the idea of human rights would later be constructed by Spanish theologians at the School of Salamanca Other Scholastics such as Roger Bacon and Albertus Magnus following the example of Islamic scholars such as Alhazen emphasised reason an intrinsic human ability to decode the created order and the structures that underlie our experienced physical reality This interpretation of reason was instrumental to the development of the scientific method in the early Universities of the high Middle Ages 21 Subject centred reason in early modern philosophy edit The early modern era was marked by a number of significant changes in the understanding of reason starting in Europe One of the most important of these changes involved a change in the metaphysical understanding of human beings Scientists and philosophers began to question the teleological understanding of the world 22 Nature was no longer assumed to be human like with its own aims or reason and human nature was no longer assumed to work according to anything other than the same laws of nature which affect inanimate things This new understanding eventually displaced the previous world view that derived from a spiritual understanding of the universe nbsp Rene DescartesAccordingly in the 17th century Rene Descartes explicitly rejected the traditional notion of humans as rational animals suggesting instead that they are nothing more than thinking things along the lines of other things in nature Any grounds of knowledge outside that understanding was therefore subject to doubt In his search for a foundation of all possible knowledge Descartes decided to throw into doubt all knowledge except that of the mind itself in the process of thinking At this time I admit nothing that is not necessarily true I am therefore precisely nothing but a thinking thing that is a mind or intellect or understanding or reason words of whose meanings I was previously ignorant 23 This eventually became known as epistemological or subject centred reason because it is based on the knowing subject who perceives the rest of the world and itself as a set of objects to be studied and successfully mastered by applying the knowledge accumulated through such study Breaking with tradition and with many thinkers after him Descartes explicitly did not divide the incorporeal soul into parts such as reason and intellect describing them instead as one indivisible incorporeal entity A contemporary of Descartes Thomas Hobbes described reason as a broader version of addition and subtraction which is not limited to numbers 24 This understanding of reason is sometimes termed calculative reason Similar to Descartes Hobbes asserted that No discourse whatsoever can end in absolute knowledge of fact past or to come but that sense and memory is absolute knowledge 25 In the late 17th century through the 18th century John Locke and David Hume developed Descartes s line of thought still further Hume took it in an especially skeptical direction proposing that there could be no possibility of deducing relationships of cause and effect and therefore no knowledge is based on reasoning alone even if it seems otherwise 26 Hume famously remarked that We speak not strictly and philosophically when we talk of the combat of passion and of reason Reason is and ought only to be the slave of the passions and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them 27 Hume also took his definition of reason to unorthodox extremes by arguing unlike his predecessors that human reason is not qualitatively different from either simply conceiving individual ideas or from judgments associating two ideas 28 and that reason is nothing but a wonderful and unintelligible instinct in our souls which carries us along a certain train of ideas and endows them with particular qualities according to their particular situations and relations 29 It followed from this that animals have reason only much less complex than human reason In the 18th century Immanuel Kant attempted to show that Hume was wrong by demonstrating that a transcendental self or I was a necessary condition of all experience Therefore suggested Kant on the basis of such a self it is in fact possible to reason both about the conditions and limits of human knowledge And so long as these limits are respected reason can be the vehicle of morality justice aesthetics theories of knowledge epistemology and understanding citation needed Substantive and formal reason edit In the formulation of Kant who wrote some of the most influential modern treatises on the subject the great achievement of reason German Vernunft is that it is able to exercise a kind of universal law making Kant was able therefore to reformulate the basis of moral practical theoretical and aesthetic reasoning on universal laws Here practical reasoning is the self legislating or self governing formulation of universal norms and theoretical reasoning is the way humans posit universal laws of nature 30 Under practical reason the moral autonomy or freedom of people depends on their ability by the proper exercise of that reason to behave according to laws that are given to them This contrasted with earlier forms of morality which depended on religious understanding and interpretation or on nature for their substance 31 According to Kant in a free society each individual must be able to pursue their goals however they see fit as long as their actions conform to principles given by reason He formulated such a principle called the categorical imperative which would justify an action only if it could be universalized Act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law 32 In contrast to Hume Kant insisted that reason itself German Vernunft could be used to find solutions to metaphysical problems especially the discovery of the foundations of morality Kant claimed that these solutions could be found with his transcendental logic which unlike normal logic is not just an instrument that can be used indifferently as it was for Aristotle but a theoretical science in its own right and the basis of all the others 33 According to Jurgen Habermas the substantive unity of reason has dissolved in modern times such that it can no longer answer the question How should I live Instead the unity of reason has to be strictly formal or procedural He thus described reason as a group of three autonomous spheres on the model of Kant s three critiques Cognitive instrumental reason the kind of reason employed by the sciences used to observe events to predict and control outcomes and to intervene in the world on the basis of its hypotheses Moral practical reason what we use to deliberate and discuss issues in the moral and political realm according to universalizable procedures similar to Kant s categorical imperative Aesthetic reason typically found in works of art and literature and encompasses the novel ways of seeing the world and interpreting things that those practices embodyFor Habermas these three spheres are the domain of experts and therefore need to be mediated with the lifeworld by philosophers In drawing such a picture of reason Habermas hoped to demonstrate that the substantive unity of reason which in pre modern societies had been able to answer questions about the good life could be made up for by the unity of reason s formalizable procedures 34 The critique of reason edit Hamann Herder Kant Hegel Kierkegaard Nietzsche Heidegger Foucault Rorty and many other philosophers have contributed to a debate about what reason means or ought to mean Some like Kierkegaard Nietzsche and Rorty are skeptical about subject centred universal or instrumental reason and even skeptical toward reason as a whole Others including Hegel believe that it has obscured the importance of intersubjectivity or spirit in human life and they attempt to reconstruct a model of what reason should be Some thinkers e g Foucault believe there are other forms of reason neglected but essential to modern life and to our understanding of what it means to live a life according to reason 13 Others suggest that there is not just one reason or rationality but multiple possible systems of reason or rationality which may conflict in which case there is no super rational system one can appeal to in order to resolve the conflict 35 In the last several decades a number of proposals have been made to re orient this critique of reason or to recognize the other voices or new departments of reason For example in opposition to subject centred reason Habermas has proposed a model of communicative reason that sees it as an essentially cooperative activity based on the fact of linguistic intersubjectivity 36 Nikolas Kompridis proposed a widely encompassing view of reason as that ensemble of practices that contributes to the opening and preserving of openness in human affairs and a focus on reason s possibilities for social change 37 The philosopher Charles Taylor influenced by the 20th century German philosopher Martin Heidegger proposed that reason ought to include the faculty of disclosure which is tied to the way we make sense of things in everyday life as a new department of reason 38 In the essay What is Enlightenment Michel Foucault proposed a critique based on Kant s distinction between private and public uses of reason 39 Private reason the reason that is used when an individual is a cog in a machine or when one has a role to play in society and jobs to do to be a soldier to have taxes to pay to be in charge of a parish to be a civil servant Public reason the reason used when one is reasoning as a reasonable being and not as a cog in a machine when one is reasoning as a member of reasonable humanity in these circumstances the use of reason must be free and public Reason compared to related concepts editReason compared to logic edit See also Logic The terms logic or logical are sometimes used as if they were identical with reason or rational or sometimes logic is seen as the most pure or the defining form of reason Logic is about reasoning about going from premises to a conclusion When you do logic you try to clarify reasoning and separate good from bad reasoning 40 In modern economics rational choice is assumed to equate to logically consistent choice 41 However reason and logic can be thought of as distinct although logic is one important aspect of reason Author Douglas Hofstadter in Godel Escher Bach characterizes the distinction in this way Logic is done inside a system while reason is done outside the system by such methods as skipping steps working backward drawing diagrams looking at examples or seeing what happens if you change the rules of the system 42 Psychologists Mark H Bickard and Robert L Campbell argue that rationality cannot be simply assimilated to logicality they note that human knowledge of logic and logical systems has developed over time through reasoning and logical systems can t construct new logical systems more powerful than themselves so reasoning and rationality must involve more than a system of logic 43 44 Psychologist David Moshman citing Bickhard and Campbell argues for a metacognitive conception of rationality in which a person s development of reason involves increasing consciousness and control of logical and other inferences 44 45 Reason is a type of thought and logic involves the attempt to describe a system of formal rules or norms of appropriate reasoning 44 The oldest surviving writing to explicitly consider the rules by which reason operates are the works of the Greek philosopher Aristotle especially Prior Analytics and Posterior Analytics 46 non primary source needed Although the Ancient Greeks had no separate word for logic as distinct from language and reason Aristotle s newly coined word syllogism syllogismos identified logic clearly for the first time as a distinct field of study 47 When Aristotle referred to the logical he logike he was referring more broadly to rational thought 48 Reason compared to cause and effect thinking and symbolic thinking edit Main articles Causality and Symbols As pointed out by philosophers such as Hobbes Locke and Hume some animals are also clearly capable of a type of associative thinking even to the extent of associating causes and effects A dog once kicked can learn how to recognize the warning signs and avoid being kicked in the future but this does not mean the dog has reason in any strict sense of the word It also does not mean that humans acting on the basis of experience or habit are using their reason 29 Human reason requires more than being able to associate two ideas even if those two ideas might be described by a reasoning human as a cause and an effect perceptions of smoke for example and memories of fire For reason to be involved the association of smoke and the fire would have to be thought through in a way that can be explained for example as cause and effect In the explanation of Locke for example reason requires the mental use of a third idea in order to make this comparison by use of syllogism 49 More generally according to Charles Sanders Peirce reason in the strict sense requires the ability to create and manipulate a system of symbols as well as indices and icons the symbols having only a nominal though habitual connection to either for example smoke or fire 50 One example of such a system of symbols and signs is language The connection of reason to symbolic thinking has been expressed in different ways by philosophers Thomas Hobbes described the creation of Markes or Notes of remembrance as speech 51 He used the word speech as an English version of the Greek word logos so that speech did not need to be communicated 52 When communicated such speech becomes language and the marks or notes or remembrance are called Signes by Hobbes Going further back although Aristotle is a source of the idea that only humans have reason logos he does mention that animals with imagination for whom sense perceptions can persist come closest to having something like reasoning and nous and even uses the word logos in one place to describe the distinctions which animals can perceive in such cases 53 Reason imagination mimesis and memory edit Main articles Imagination Mimesis Memory and Recollection Reason and imagination rely on similar mental processes 54 Imagination is not only found in humans Aristotle asserted that phantasia imagination that which can hold images or phantasmata and phronein a type of thinking that can judge and understand in some sense also exist in some animals 55 According to him both are related to the primary perceptive ability of animals which gathers the perceptions of different senses and defines the order of the things that are perceived without distinguishing universals and without deliberation or logos But this is not yet reason because human imagination is different Terrence Deacon and Merlin Donald writing about the origin of language connect reason not only to language but also mimesis 56 They describe the ability to create language as part of an internal modeling of reality and specific to humankind Other results are consciousness and imagination or fantasy In contrast modern proponents of a genetic predisposition to language itself include Noam Chomsky and Steven Pinker clarification needed If reason is symbolic thinking and peculiarly human then this implies that humans have a special ability to maintain a clear consciousness of the distinctness of icons or images and the real things they represent Merlin Donald writes 57 172 A dog might perceive the meaning of a fight that was realistically play acted by humans but it could not reconstruct the message or distinguish the representation from its referent a real fight Trained apes are able to make this distinction young children make this distinction early hence their effortless distinction between play acting an event and the event itself In classical descriptions an equivalent description of this mental faculty is eikasia in the philosophy of Plato 58 Ch 5 This is the ability to perceive whether a perception is an image of something else related somehow but not the same and therefore allows humans to perceive that a dream or memory or a reflection in a mirror is not reality as such What Klein refers to as dianoetic eikasia is the eikasia concerned specifically with thinking and mental images such as those mental symbols icons signes and marks discussed above as definitive of reason Explaining reason from this direction human thinking is special in that we often understand visible things as if they were themselves images of our intelligible objects of thought as foundations hypotheses in Ancient Greek This thinking dianoia is an activity which consists in making the vast and diffuse jungle of the visible world depend on a plurality of more precise noeta 58 122 Both Merlin Donald and the Socratic authors such as Plato and Aristotle emphasize the importance of mimesis often translated as imitation or representation Donald writes 57 169 Imitation is found especially in monkeys and apes but Mimesis is fundamentally different from imitation and mimicry in that it involves the invention of intentional representations Mimesis is not absolutely tied to external communication Mimesis is a concept now popular again in academic discussion that was particularly prevalent in Plato s works In Aristotle it is discussed mainly in the Poetics In Michael Davis s account of the theory of man in that work 59 It is the distinctive feature of human action that whenever we choose what we do we imagine an action for ourselves as though we were inspecting it from the outside Intentions are nothing more than imagined actions internalizings of the external All action is therefore imitation of action it is poetic 60 Donald like Plato and Aristotle especially in On Memory and Recollection emphasizes the peculiarity in humans of voluntary initiation of a search through one s mental world The ancient Greek anamnesis normally translated as recollection was opposed to mneme or memory Memory shared with some animals 61 requires a consciousness not only of what happened in the past but also that something happened in the past which is in other words a kind of eikasia 58 109 but nothing except man is able to recollect 62 Recollection is a deliberate effort to search for and recapture something once known Klein writes that To become aware of our having forgotten something means to begin recollecting 58 112 Donald calls the same thing autocueing which he explains as follows 57 173 63 Mimetic acts are reproducible on the basis of internal self generated cues This permits voluntary recall of mimetic representations without the aid of external cues probably the earliest form of representational thinking In a celebrated paper the fantasy author and philologist J R R Tolkien wrote in his essay On Fairy Stories that the terms fantasy and enchantment are connected to not only the satisfaction of certain primordial human desires but also the origin of language and of the mind This quote needs a citation Logical reasoning methods and argumentation edit Main article Logical reasoning A subdivision of philosophy and a variety of reasoning is logic The traditional main division made in philosophy is between deductive reasoning and inductive reasoning Formal logic has been described as the science of deduction 64 The study of inductive reasoning is generally carried out within the field known as informal logic or critical thinking Deductive reasoning edit Main article Deductive reasoning Deduction is a form of reasoning in which a conclusion follows necessarily from the stated premises A deduction is also the name for the conclusion reached by a deductive reasoning process A classic example of deductive reasoning is evident in syllogisms like the following Premise 1 All humans are mortal Premise 2 Socrates is a human Conclusion Socrates is mortal The reasoning in this argument is deductively valid because there is no way in which both premises could be true and the conclusion be false Inductive reasoning edit Main article Inductive reasoning Induction is a form of inference that produces properties or relations about unobserved objects or types based on previous observations or experiences or that formulates general statements or laws based on limited observations of recurring phenomenal patterns Inductive reasoning contrasts with deductive reasoning in that even in the strongest cases of inductive reasoning the truth of the premises does not guarantee the truth of the conclusion Instead the conclusion of an inductive argument follows with some degree of probability For this reason also the conclusion of an inductive argument contains more information than is already contained in the premises Thus this method of reasoning is ampliative A classic example of inductive reasoning comes from the empiricist David Hume Premise The sun has risen in the east every morning up until now Conclusion The sun will also rise in the east tomorrow Analogical reasoning edit Main article Analogical reasoning Analogical reasoning is a form of inductive reasoning from a particular to a particular It is often used in case based reasoning especially legal reasoning 65 An example follows Premise 1 Socrates is human and mortal Premise 2 Plato is human Conclusion Plato is mortal Analogical reasoning is a weaker form of inductive reasoning from a single example because inductive reasoning typically uses a large number of examples to reason from the particular to the general 66 Analogical reasoning often leads to wrong conclusions For example Premise 1 Socrates is human and male Premise 2 Ada Lovelace is human Conclusion Ada Lovelace is male Abductive reasoning edit Main article Abductive reasoning Abductive reasoning or argument to the best explanation is a form of reasoning that does not fit in either the deductive or inductive categories since it starts with incomplete set of observations and proceeds with likely possible explanations The conclusion in an abductive argument does not follow with certainty from its premises and concerns something unobserved What distinguishes abduction from the other forms of reasoning is an attempt to favour one conclusion above others by subjective judgement or by attempting to falsify alternative explanations or by demonstrating the likelihood of the favoured conclusion given a set of more or less disputable assumptions For example when a patient displays certain symptoms there might be various possible causes but one of these is preferred above others as being more probable Fallacious reasoning edit Main articles Fallacy Formal fallacy and Informal fallacy Flawed reasoning in arguments is known as fallacious reasoning Bad reasoning within arguments can result from either a formal fallacy or an informal fallacy Formal fallacies occur when there is a problem with the form or structure of the argument The word formal refers to this link to the form of the argument An argument that contains a formal fallacy will always be invalid An informal fallacy is an error in reasoning that occurs due to a problem with the content rather than the form or structure of the argument Traditional problems raised concerning reason editPhilosophy is often characterized as a pursuit of rational understanding entailing a more rigorous and dedicated application of human reasoning than commonly employed Philosophers have long debated two fundamental questions regarding reason essentially examining reasoning itself as a human endeavor or philosophizing about philosophizing The first question delves into whether we can place our trust in reason s ability to attain knowledge and truth more effectively than alternative methods The second question explores whether a life guided by reason a life that aims to be guided by reason can be expected to lead to greater happiness compared to other approaches to life Reason versus truth and first principles edit See also Truth First principle and Nous Since classical antiquity a question has remained constant in philosophical debate sometimes seen as a conflict between Platonism and Aristotelianism concerning the role of reason in confirming truth People use logic deduction and induction to reach conclusions they think are true Conclusions reached in this way are considered according to Aristotle more certain than sense perceptions on their own 67 On the other hand if such reasoned conclusions are only built originally upon a foundation of sense perceptions then our most logical conclusions can never be said to be certain because they are built upon the very same fallible perceptions they seek to better 68 This leads to the question of what types of first principles or starting points of reasoning are available for someone seeking to come to true conclusions In Greek first principles are archai starting points 69 and the faculty used to perceive them is sometimes referred to in Aristotle 70 and Plato 71 as nous which was close in meaning to awareness or consciousness 72 Empiricism sometimes associated with Aristotle 73 but more correctly associated with British philosophers such as John Locke and David Hume as well as their ancient equivalents such as Democritus asserts that sensory impressions are the only available starting points for reasoning and attempting to attain truth This approach always leads to the controversial conclusion that absolute knowledge is not attainable Idealism associated with Plato and his school claims that there is a higher reality within which certain people can directly discover truth without needing to rely only upon the senses and that this higher reality is therefore the primary source of truth Philosophers such as Plato Aristotle Al Farabi Avicenna Averroes Maimonides Aquinas and Hegel are sometimes said by whom to have argued that reason must be fixed and discoverable perhaps by dialectic analysis or study In the vision of these thinkers reason is divine or at least has divine attributes Such an approach allowed religious philosophers such as Thomas Aquinas and Etienne Gilson to try to show that reason and revelation are compatible According to Hegel the only thought which Philosophy brings with it to the contemplation of History is the simple conception of reason that reason is the Sovereign of the World that the history of the world therefore presents us with a rational process 74 Since the 17th century rationalists reason has often been taken to be a subjective faculty or rather the unaided ability pure reason to form concepts For Descartes Spinoza and Leibniz this was associated with mathematics Kant attempted to show that pure reason could form concepts time and space that are the conditions of experience Kant made his argument in opposition to Hume who denied that reason had any role to play in experience Reason versus emotion or passion edit See also Emotion and Passion emotion After Plato and Aristotle western literature often treated reason as being the faculty that trained the passions and appetites citation needed Stoic philosophy by contrast claimed most emotions were merely false judgements 75 76 According to the Stoics the only good is virtue and the only evil is vice therefore emotions that judged things other than vice to be bad such as fear or distress or things other than virtue to be good such as greed were simply false judgements and should be discarded though positive emotions based on true judgements such as kindness were acceptable 75 76 77 After the critiques of reason in the early Enlightenment the appetites were rarely discussed or were conflated with the passions citation needed Some Enlightenment camps took after the Stoics to say reason should oppose passion rather than order it while others like the Romantics believed that passion displaces reason as in the maxim follow your heart citation needed Reason has been seen as cold an enemy of mystery and ambiguity 78 a slave or judge of the passions notably in the work of David Hume and more recently of Freud citation needed Reasoning that claims the object of a desire is demanded by logic alone is called rationalization citation needed Rousseau first proposed in his second Discourse that reason and political life is not natural and is possibly harmful to mankind 79 He asked what really can be said about what is natural to mankind What other than reason and civil society best suits his constitution Rousseau saw two principles prior to reason in human nature First we hold an intense interest in our own well being Secondly we object to the suffering or death of any sentient being especially one like ourselves 80 These two passions lead us to desire more than we could achieve We become dependent upon each other and on relationships of authority and obedience This effectively puts the human race into slavery Rousseau says that he almost dares to assert that nature does not destine men to be healthy According to Richard Velkley Rousseau outlines certain programs of rational self correction most notably the political legislation of the Contrat Social and the moral education in Emile All the same Rousseau understands such corrections to be only ameliorations of an essentially unsatisfactory condition that of socially and intellectually corrupted humanity This quote needs a citation This quandary presented by Rousseau led to Kant s new way of justifying reason as freedom to create good and evil These therefore are not to be blamed on nature or God In various ways German Idealism after Kant and major later figures such Nietzsche Bergson Husserl Scheler and Heidegger remain preoccupied with problems coming from the metaphysical demands or urges of reason 81 Rousseau and these later writers also exerted a large influence on art and politics Many writers such as Nikos Kazantzakis extol passion and disparage reason In politics modern nationalism comes from Rousseau s argument that rationalist cosmopolitanism brings man ever further from his natural state 82 In Descartes Error Antonio Damasio presents the Somatic Marker Hypothesis which states that emotions guide behavior and decision making Damasio argues that these somatic markers known collectively as gut feelings are intuitive signals that direct our decision making processes in a certain way that cannot be solved with rationality alone Damasio further argues that rationality requires emotional input in order to function Reason versus faith or tradition edit Main articles Faith Religion and Tradition There are many religious traditions some of which are explicitly fideist and others of which claim varying degrees of rationalism Secular critics sometimes accuse all religious adherents of irrationality they claim such adherents are guilty of ignoring suppressing or forbidding some kinds of reasoning concerning some subjects such as religious dogmas moral taboos etc 83 Though theologies and religions such as classical monotheism typically do not admit to being irrational there is often a perceived conflict or tension between faith and tradition on the one hand and reason on the other as potentially competing sources of wisdom law and truth 72 84 Religious adherents sometimes respond by arguing that faith and reason can be reconciled or have different non overlapping domains or that critics engage in a similar kind of irrationalism Reconciliation Philosopher Alvin Plantinga argues that there is no real conflict between reason and classical theism because classical theism explains among other things why the universe is intelligible and why reason can successfully grasp it 85 Non overlapping magisteria Evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould argues that there need not be conflict between reason and religious belief because they are each authoritative in their own domain or magisterium 86 If so reason can work on those problems over which it has authority while other sources of knowledge or opinion can have authority on the big questions 87 Tu quoque Philosophers Alasdair MacIntyre and Charles Taylor argue that those critics of traditional religion who are adherents of secular liberalism are also sometimes guilty of ignoring suppressing and forbidding some kinds of reasoning about subjects 88 Similarly philosophers of science such as Paul Feyarabend argue that scientists sometimes ignore or suppress evidence contrary to the dominant paradigm Unification Theologian Joseph Ratzinger later Benedict XVI asserted that Christianity has understood itself as the religion of the Logos as the religion according to reason referring to John 1 Ἐn ἀrxῇ ἦn ὁ logos usually translated as In the beginning was the Word Logos Thus he said that the Christian faith is open to all that is truly rational and that the rationality of Western Enlightenment is of Christian origin 89 Some commentators have claimed that Western civilization can be almost defined by its serious testing of the limits of tension between unaided reason and faith in revealed truths figuratively summarized as Athens and Jerusalem respectively 90 Leo Strauss spoke of a Greater West that included all areas under the influence of the tension between Greek rationalism and Abrahamic revelation including the Muslim lands He was particularly influenced by the Muslim philosopher Al Farabi To consider to what extent Eastern philosophy might have partaken of these important tensions Strauss thought it best to consider whether dharma or tao may be equivalent to Nature physis in Greek According to Strauss the beginning of philosophy involved the discovery or invention of nature and the pre philosophical equivalent of nature was supplied by such notions as custom or ways which appear to be really universal in all times and places The philosophical concept of nature or natures as a way of understanding archai first principles of knowledge brought about a peculiar tension between reasoning on the one hand and tradition or faith on the other 72 Although there is this history of debate concerning reason and faith in the Islamic Christian and Jewish traditions the pursuit of reason is sometimes argued to be compatible with the other practice of other religions of a different nature such as Hinduism because they do not define their tenets in such an absolute way 91 Reason in particular fields of study editPsychology and cognitive science edit See also Psychology of reasoning Scientific research into reasoning is carried out within the fields of psychology and cognitive science Psychologists attempt to determine whether or not people are capable of rational thought in a number of different circumstances Assessing how well someone engages in reasoning is the project of determining the extent to which the person is rational or acts rationally It is a key research question in the psychology of reasoning and cognitive science of reasoning Rationality is often divided into its respective theoretical and practical counterparts Behavioral experiments on human reasoning edit Experimental cognitive psychologists carry out research on reasoning behaviour Such research may focus for example on how people perform on tests of reasoning such as intelligence or IQ tests or on how well people s reasoning matches ideals set by logic see for example the Wason test 92 Experiments examine how people make inferences from conditionals like if A then B and how they make inferences about alternatives like A or else B 93 They test whether people can make valid deductions about spatial and temporal relations like A is to the left of B or A happens after B and about quantified assertions like all the A are B 94 Experiments investigate how people make inferences about factual situations hypothetical possibilities probabilities and counterfactual situations 95 Developmental studies of children s reasoning edit Developmental psychologists investigate the development of reasoning from birth to adulthood Piaget s theory of cognitive development was the first complete theory of reasoning development Subsequently several alternative theories were proposed including the neo Piagetian theories of cognitive development 96 Neuroscience of reasoning edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The biological functioning of the brain is studied by neurophysiologists cognitive neuroscientists and neuropsychologists This includes research into the structure and function of normally functioning brains and of damaged or otherwise unusual brains In addition to carrying out research into reasoning some psychologists for example clinical psychologists and psychotherapists work to alter people s reasoning habits when those habits are unhelpful Computer science edit Automated reasoning edit Main articles Automated reasoning and Computational logic See also Reasoning system Case based reasoning Semantic reasoner and Knowledge reasoning In artificial intelligence and computer science scientists study and use automated reasoning for diverse applications including automated theorem proving the formal semantics of programming languages and formal specification in software engineering Meta reasoning edit See also Metacognition Meta reasoning is reasoning about reasoning In computer science a system performs meta reasoning when it is reasoning about its own operation 97 This requires a programming language capable of reflection the ability to observe and modify its own structure and behaviour Evolution of reason edit nbsp Dan Sperber believes that reasoning in groups is more effective and promotes their evolutionary fitness A species could benefit greatly from better abilities to reason about predict and understand the world French social and cognitive scientists Dan Sperber and Hugo Mercier argue that aside from these benefits there could have been other forces driving the evolution of reason They point out that reasoning is very difficult for humans to do effectively and that it is hard for individuals to doubt their own beliefs confirmation bias Reasoning is most effective when it is done as a collective as demonstrated by the success of projects like science They suggest that there are not just individual but group selection pressures at play Any group that managed to find ways of reasoning effectively would reap benefits for all its members increasing their fitness This could also help explain why humans according to Sperber are not optimized to reason effectively alone Sperber s amp Mercier s argumentative theory of reasoning claims that reason may have more to do with winning arguments than with the search for the truth 98 Reason in political philosophy and ethics edit Main articles Political Philosophy Ethics and The Good Aristotle famously described reason with language as a part of human nature because of which it is best for humans to live politically meaning in communities of about the size and type of a small city state polis in Greek For example It is clear then that a human being is more of a political politikon of the polis animal zōion than is any bee or than any of those animals that live in herds For nature as we say makes nothing in vain and humans are the only animals who possess reasoned speech logos Voice of course serves to indicate what is painful and pleasant that is why it is also found in other animals because their nature has reached the point where they can perceive what is painful and pleasant and express these to each other But speech logos serves to make plain what is advantageous and harmful and so also what is just and unjust For it is a peculiarity of humans in contrast to the other animals to have perception of good and bad just and unjust and the like and the community in these things makes a household or city polis By nature then the drive for such a community exists in everyone but the first to set one up is responsible for things of very great goodness For as humans are the best of all animals when perfected so they are the worst when divorced from law and right The reason is that injustice is most difficult to deal with when furnished with weapons and the weapons a human being has are meant by nature to go along with prudence and virtue but it is only too possible to turn them to contrary uses Consequently if a human being lacks virtue he is the most unholy and savage thing and when it comes to sex and food the worst But justice is something political to do with the polis for right is the arrangement of the political community and right is discrimination of what is just 99 I 2 1253a If human nature is fixed in this way we can define what type of community is always best for people This argument has remained a central argument in all political ethical and moral thinking since then and has become especially controversial since firstly Rousseau s Second Discourse and secondly the Theory of Evolution Already in Aristotle there was an awareness that the polis had not always existed and had to be invented or developed by humans themselves The household came first and the first villages and cities were just extensions of that with the first cities being run as if they were still families with Kings acting like fathers 99 I 2 1252b15 Friendship seems to prevail in man and woman according to nature kata phusin for people are by nature tei phusei pairing more than political politikon in as much as the household oikos is prior and more necessary than the polis and making children is more common koinoteron with the animals In the other animals community koinōnia goes no further than this but people live together sumoikousin not only for the sake of making children but also for the things for life for from the start the functions erga are divided and are different for man and woman Thus they supply each other putting their own into the common eis to koinon It is for these reasons that both utility and pleasure seem to be found in this kind of friendship 6 VIII 12 Rousseau in his Second Discourse finally took the shocking step of claiming that this traditional account has things in reverse with reason language and rationally organized communities all having developed over a long period of time merely as a result of the fact that some habits of cooperation were found to solve certain types of problems and that once such cooperation became more important it forced people to develop increasingly complex cooperation often only to defend themselves from each other In other words according to Rousseau reason language and rational community did not arise because of any conscious decision or plan by humans or gods nor because of any pre existing human nature As a result he claimed living together in rationally organized communities like modern humans is a development with many negative aspects compared to the original state of man as an ape If anything is specifically human in this theory it is the flexibility and adaptability of humans This view of the animal origins of distinctive human characteristics later received support from Charles Darwin s Theory of Evolution The two competing theories concerning the origins of reason are relevant to political and ethical thought because according to the Aristotelian theory a best way of living together exists independently of historical circumstances According to Rousseau we should even doubt that reason language and politics are a good thing as opposed to being simply the best option given the particular course of events that led to today Rousseau s theory that human nature is malleable rather than fixed is often taken to imply for example by Karl Marx a wider range of possible ways of living together than traditionally known However while Rousseau s initial impact encouraged bloody revolutions against traditional politics including both the French Revolution and the Russian Revolution his own conclusions about the best forms of community seem to have been remarkably classical in favor of city states such as Geneva and rural living See also edit nbsp Philosophy portal nbsp Psychology portalArgument Attempt to persuade or to determine the truth of a conclusion Argumentation theory Study of how conclusions are reached through logical reasoning one of four rhetorical modes Common sense Sound practical judgement in everyday matters Confirmation bias Bias confirming existing attitudes Conformity Matching opinions and behaviors to group norms Critical thinking Analysis of facts to form a judgment Logic and rationality Fundamental concepts in philosophy Outline of thought Topic tree that identifies many types of thoughts thinking types of reasoning aspects of thought related fields and more Outline of human intelligence Topic tree presenting the traits capacities models and research fields of human intelligence and more Transduction psychology generalization of attributes from specific examples of a category to the whole categoryPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackReferences edit Proudfoot Michael 2010 The Routledge dictionary of philosophy A R Lacey 4th ed London Routledge p 341 ISBN 978 0203428467 OCLC 503050369 Reason A general faculty common to all or nearly all humans this faculty has seemed to be of two sorts a faculty of intuition by which one sees truths or abstract things essences or universals etc and a faculty of reasoning i e passing from premises to a conclusion discursive reason The verb reason is confined to this latter sense which is now anyway the commonest for the noun tooRescher Nicholas 2005 The Oxford companion to philosophy Ted Honderich 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 791 ISBN 978 0191532658 OCLC 62563098 reason The general human faculty or capacity for truth seeking and problem solving Mercier Hugo Sperber Dan 2017 The Enigma of Reason Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 2 ISBN 978 0674368309 OCLC 959650235 Enhanced with reason cognition can secure better knowledge in all domains and adjust action to novel and ambitious goals or so the story goes Understanding why only a few species have echolocation is easy Understanding why only humans have reason is much more challenging Compare MacIntyre Alasdair 1999 Dependent Rational Animals Why Human Beings Need the Virtues The Paul Carus Lectures Vol 20 Open Court Publishing ISBN 978 0812693973 OCLC 40632451 Retrieved 2014 12 01 T he exercise of independent practical reasoning is one essential constituent to full human flourishing It is not as I have already insisted that one cannot flourish at all if unable to reason Nonetheless not to be able to reason soundly at the level of practice is a grave disability Swindal James Faith Historical Perspectives Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Duquesne University Retrieved December 18 2023 Amoretti Maria Cristina Vassallo Nicla eds 2013 Reason and Rationality Philosophische Analyse Philosophical Analysis Vol 48 Berlin De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110325867 ISBN 978 3868381634 OCLC 807032616 Audi Robert 2001 The Architecture of Reason The Structure and Substance of Rationality Oxford New York Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195158427 001 0001 ISBN 0195141121 OCLC 44046914 Eze Emmanuel Chukwudi 2008 On Reason Rationality in a World of Cultural Conflict and Racism Durham NC Duke University Press doi 10 1215 9780822388777 ISBN 978 0822341789 OCLC 180989486 Rescher Nicholas 1988 Rationality A Philosophical Inquiry into the Nature and the Rationale of Reason Clarendon Library of Logic and Philosophy Oxford New York Clarendon Press Oxford University Press ISBN 0198244355 OCLC 17954516 Hintikka J Philosophy of logic Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 12 November 2013 a b c Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics Foucault Michel 2003 What is Enlightenment In Rabinow Paul Rose Nikolas eds The Essential Foucault New York The New Press pp 43 57 Kompridis Nikolas 2000 So We Need Something Else for Reason to Mean International Journal of Philosophical Studies Informa UK Limited 8 3 271 295 doi 10 1080 096725500750039282 ISSN 0967 2559 S2CID 171038942 Kompridis Nikolas 2006 The Idea of a New Beginning A Romantic Source of Normativity and Freedom Philosophical Romanticism New York Routledge pp 32 59 a b reason Merriam Webster Dictionary 10 September 2023 Rachels James 2002 The Elements of Moral Philosophy 4th ed McGraw Hill page needed Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1940 logos A Greek English Lexicon Oxford Clarendon Press Word History logic Merriam Webster Dictionary 14 September 2023 Lewis Charlton Short Charles ratio A Latin Dictionary rational Merriam Webster Dictionary 13 September 2023 reasonable Merriam Webster Dictionary 12 September 2023 a b Habermas Jurgen 1990 The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Cambridge Mass MIT Press Kirk Raven Schofield 1983 The Presocratic Philosophers second ed Cambridge University Press pp 204 amp 235 a b Davidson Herbert 1992 Alfarabi Avicenna and Averroes on Intellect Oxford University Press p 3 Moore Edward Plotinus Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Turner William 1911 Plato and Platonism Catholic Encyclopedia vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company Hellenism Catholic Dictionary Rahilly Alfred 1911 Reason Catholic Encyclopedia vol 12 New York Robert Appleton Company Fox James 1910 Natural Law Catholic Encyclopedia vol 9 New York Robert Appleton Company De Cruz Helen 2022 Religion and Science Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Dreyfus Hubert Telepistemology Descartes Last Stand socrates berkeley edu Archived from the original on 2011 05 21 Retrieved February 23 2011 Descartes Rene 1641 Concerning the Nature of the Human Mind Meditations on First Philosophy Hobbes Thomas 1839 1655 Of Philosophy in Molesworth William ed Elements of Philosophy I De Corpore London J Bohn p 5 We must not therefore think that computation that is ratiocination has place only in numbers as if man were distinguished from other living creatures which is said to have been the opinion of Pythagoras by nothing but the faculty of numbering for magnitude body motion time degrees of quality action conception proportion speech and names in which all the kinds of philosophy consist are capable of addition and substraction sic Now such things as we add or substract that is which we put into an account we are said to consider in Greek logizes8ai logizesthai in which language also syllogizes8i syllogizesthai signifies to compute reason or reckon Hobbes Thomas 1651 Of the ends or resolutions of discourse LeviathanHobbes Thomas 1651 Of the several subjects of knowledge Leviathan Locke John 1689 Of Identity and Diversity An Essay concerning Human Understanding Vol II Hume David 1740 Of Personal Identity A Treatise of Human Nature Vol I 4 Hume David 1740 Of the influencing motives of the will A Treatise of Human Nature vol II 3 Hume David 1740 Of the Nature of the Idea Or Belief A Treatise of Human Nature vol I 3 footnote 1 a b Hume David 1740 Of the reason of animals A Treatise of Human Nature vol I 3 Kant Immanuel 1781 Critique of Pure Reason Kant Immanuel 1788 Critique of Practical Reason Sandel Michael 2009 Justice What s the Right Thing to Do New York Farrar Straus and Giroux Kant Immanuel 1993 1785 Grounding for the Metaphysics of Morals Translated by Ellington James W 3rd ed Hackett p 30 ISBN 978 0872201668 Velkley Richard 2002 On Kant s Socratism Being After Rousseau University of Chicago Press Kant Immanuel 1781 Critique of Pure Reason Preface Habermas Jurgen 1995 Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action Cambridge Mass MIT Press Nozick Robert 1993 The Nature of Rationality page needed MacIntyre Alasdair 1988 Whose Justice Which Rationality Habermas Jurgen 1984 The Theory of Communicative Action Reason and the Rationalization of Society Translated by McCarthy Thomas Boston Beacon Press Kompridis Nikolas 2006 Critique and Disclosure Critical Theory between Past and Future Cambridge Mass MIT Press Kompridis Nikolas 2000 So We Need Something Else for Reason to Mean International Journal of Philosophical Studies 8 3 271 295 doi 10 1080 096725500750039282 S2CID 171038942 Taylor Charles 1997 Philosophical Arguments Harvard University Press pp 12 15 ISBN 978 0674664777 Foucault Michel 2003 What is Enlightenment The Essential Foucault New York The New Press pp 43 57 Gensler Harry J 2010 Introduction to Logic 2nd ed New York Routledge p 1 doi 10 4324 9780203855003 ISBN 978 0415996501 OCLC 432990013 Gachter Simon 2013 Rationality social preferences and strategic decision making from a behavioral economics perspective In Wittek Rafael Snijders T A B Nee Victor eds The Handbook of Rational Choice Social Research Stanford CA Stanford Social Sciences an imprint of Stanford University Press pp 33 71 33 doi 10 1515 9780804785501 004 ISBN 978 0804784184 OCLC 807769289 S2CID 242795845 The central assumption of the rational choice approach is that decision makers have logically consistent goals whatever they are and given these goals choose the best available option Hofstadter Douglas R 1999 1979 Godel Escher Bach An Eternal Golden Braid 20th anniversary ed New York Basic Books ISBN 0394756827 OCLC 40724766 Bickhard Mark H Campbell Robert L July 1996 Developmental aspects of expertise rationality and generalization Journal of Experimental amp Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 8 3 4 399 417 doi 10 1080 095281396147393 a b c Moshman David May 2004 From inference to reasoning the construction of rationality Thinking amp Reasoning 10 2 221 239 doi 10 1080 13546780442000024 S2CID 43330718 Ricco Robert B 2015 The development of reasoning In Lerner Richard M ed Handbook of Child Psychology and Developmental Science Vol 2 Cognitive Processes 7th ed Hoboken N J John Wiley amp Sons pp 519 570 534 doi 10 1002 9781118963418 childpsy213 ISBN 978 1118136850 OCLC 888024689 Moshman s theory of the development of deductive reasoning considers changes in metacognition to be the essential story behind the development of deductive and inductive reasoning In his view reasoning involves explicit conceptual knowledge regarding inference metalogical knowledge and metacognitive awareness of and control over inference Aristotle 1984 Complete Works Vol 1 Princeton University Press pp 39 166 ISBN 0691099502 Smith Robin 2017 Aristotle s Logic in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2020 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2022 06 08 See this Perseus search and compare English translations and see LSJ dictionary entry for logikos section II 2 b Locke John 1689 Of Reason An Essay concerning Human Understanding Vol IV Deacon Terrence 1998 The Symbolic Species The Co Evolution of Language and the Brain W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0393317544 Hobbes Thomas 1651 Of speech Leviathan Hobbes Thomas 1651 Of speech Leviathan The Greeks have but one word logos for both speech and reason not that they thought there was no speech without reason but no reasoning without speech Aristotle Posterior Analytics II 19 Byrne Ruth M J 2005 The Rational Imagination How People Create Counterfactual Alternatives to Reality Cambridge Mass MIT Press Aristotle De Anima III 1 3 Mimesis in modern academic writing starting with Erich Auerbach is a technical word which is not necessarily exactly the same in meaning as the original Greek a b c Donald Merlin Origins of the Modern Mind ISBN missing a b c d Klein Jacob A Commentary on the Meno Davis Michael Benardete Seth Introduction Poetics of Aristotle pp xvii xxviii Davis uses poetic in an unusual sense questioning the contrast in Aristotle between action praxis the praktike and making poesis the poetike Human peculiarly human action is imitation of action because thinking is always rethinking Aristotle can define human beings as at once rational animals political animals and imitative animals because in the end the three are the same Aristotle On Memory 450a 15 16 Aristotle History of Animals I 1 488b 25 26 Donald Merlin A Mind So Rare pp 140 141 ISBN missing Jeffrey Richard 1991 Formal logic its scope and limits 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill p 1 Walton Douglas N 2014 Argumentation Schemes for Argument from Analogy In Ribeiro Henrique Jales ed Systematic Approaches to Argument by Analogy Argumentation library Vol 25 Cham New York Springer Verlag pp 23 40 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 06334 8 2 ISBN 978 3319063331 OCLC 884441074 Henderson Leah 2022 The Problem of Induction The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Aristotle Metaphysics in Ancient Greek 981b tὴn ὀnomazomenhn sofian perὶ tὰ prῶta aἴtia kaὶ tὰs ἀrxὰs ὑpolambanoysi pantes ὥste ka8aper eἴrhtai proteron ὁ mὲn ἔmpeiros tῶn ὁpoianoῦn ἐxontwn aἴs8hsin eἶnai dokeῖ sofwteros ὁ dὲ texniths tῶn ἐmpeirwn xeirotexnoy dὲ ἀrxitektwn aἱ dὲ 8ewrhtikaὶ tῶn poihtikῶn mᾶllon what is called Wisdom is concerned with the primary causes and principles so that as has been already stated the man of experience is held to be wiser than the mere possessors of any power of sensation the artist than the man of experience the master craftsman than the artisan and the speculative sciences to be more learned than the productive Aristotle Metaphysics in Ancient Greek 1009b poῖa oὖn toytwn ἀlh8ῆ ἢ pseydῆ ἄdhlon oὐ8ὲn gὰr mᾶllon tade ἢ tade ἀlh8ῆ ἀll ὁmoiws diὸ Dhmokritos ge fhsin ἤtoi oὐ8ὲn eἶnai ἀlh8ὲs ἢ ἡmῖn g ἄdhlon Thus it is uncertain which of these impressions are true or false for one kind is no more true than another but equally so And hence Democritus says that either there is no truth or we cannot discover it Aristotle Metaphysics in Ancient Greek 983a ἐpeὶ dὲ fanerὸn ὅti tῶn ἐ3 ἀrxῆs aἰtiwn deῖ labeῖn ἐpisthmhn tote gὰr eἰdenai famὲn ἕkaston ὅtan tὴn prwthn aἰtian oἰwme8a gnwrizein It is clear that we must obtain knowledge of the primary causes because it is when we think that we understand its primary cause that we claim to know each particular thing Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics in Ancient Greek 1139b ἀmfoterwn dὴ tῶn nohtikῶn moriwn ἀlh8eia tὸ ἔrgon ka8 ἃs oὖn malista ἕ3eis ἀlh8eysei ἑkateron aὗtai ἀretaὶ ἀmfoῖn The attainment of truth is then the function of both the intellectual parts of the soul Therefore their respective virtues are those dispositions that will best qualify them to attain truth Plato Republic in Ancient Greek 490b migeὶs tῷ ὄnti ὄntws gennhsas noῦn kaὶ ἀlh8eian gnoih Consorting with reality really he would beget intelligence and truth attain to knowledge a b c Strauss Leo 1989 1975 Progress or Return In Gilden Hilail ed An Introduction to Political Philosophy Ten Essays by Leo Strauss Detroit Wayne State University Press This quest for the beginnings proceeds through sense perception reasoning and what they call noesis which is literally translated by understanding or intellect and which we can perhaps translate a little bit more cautiously by awareness an awareness of the mind s eye as distinguished from sensible awareness However the empiricism of Aristotle must certainly be doubted For example in Metaphysics 1009b cited above he criticizes people who think knowledge might not be possible because They say that the impression given through sense perception is necessarily true for it is on these grounds that both Empedocles and Democritus and practically all the rest have become obsessed by such opinions as these Hegel G W F 1956 1837 The Philosophy of History Dover Publications Inc p 9 ISBN 0486201120 a b Sharples R W 2005 The Oxford companion to philosophy Ted Honderich 2nd ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 896 ISBN 978 0191532658 OCLC 62563098 Moral virtue is the only good an wickedness the only evil Emotions are interpreted in intellectual terms those such as distress pity which is a species of distress and fear which reflect false judgements about what is evil are to be avoided as also are those which reflect false judgement about what is good such as love of honours or riches They did however allow the wise man such good feelings as watchfulness or kindness the difference being that these are based on sound Stoic reasoning concerning what matters and what does not a b Rufus Musonius 2000 Concise Routledge encyclopedia of philosophy Routledge London Routledge p 863 ISBN 0203169948 OCLC 49569365 Vice is founded on passions these are at root false value judgements in which we lose rational control by overvaluing things which are in fact indifferent Virtue a set of sciences governing moral choice is the one thing of intrinsic worth and therefore genuinely good Baltzly Dirk 2018 Stoicism in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2019 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2021 03 27 Radford Benjamin Frazier Kendrick January 2017 The Edge of Reason A Rational Skeptic in an Irrational World Skeptical Inquirer 41 1 60 Velkley Richard 2002 Speech Imagination Origins Rousseau and the Political Animal Being after Rousseau Philosophy and Culture in Question University of Chicago Press Rousseau Jean Jacques 1997 1755 Preface in Gourevitch ed Discourse on the Origin and Foundations of Inequality Among Men or Second Discourse Cambridge University Press Velkley Richard 2002 Freedom Teleology and Justification of Reason Being after Rousseau Philosophy and Culture in Question University of Chicago Press Plattner Marc 1997 Rousseau and the Origins of Nationalism The Legacy of Rousseau University of Chicago Press Dawkins Richard 2008 The God Delusion Reprint ed Mariner Books ISBN 978 0618918249 Scientists see the fight for evolution as only one battle in a larger war a looming war between supernaturalism on the one side and rationality on the other Locke John 1689 Of Faith and Reason and their distinct provinces An Essay concerning Human Understanding Vol IV Plantinga Alvin 2011 Where the Conflict Really Lies Science Religion and Naturalism 1 ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199812097 Natural Signs and Knowledge of God A New Look at Theistic Arguments Reprint ed Oxford Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0199661077 Stephen Jay Gould 1997 Nonoverlapping Magisteria www stephenjaygould org Archived from the original on 2016 04 25 Retrieved 2016 04 06 To say it for all my colleagues and for the umpteenth millionth time from college bull sessions to learned treatises science simply cannot by its legitimate methods adjudicate the issue of God s possible superintendence of nature We neither affirm nor deny it we simply can t comment on it as scientists a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Dawkins Richard 2008 4 The God Delusion Reprint ed Mariner Books ISBN 978 0618918249 This sounds terrific right up until you give it a moment s thought You then realize that the presence of a creative deity in the universe is clearly a scientific hypothesis Indeed it is hard to imagine a more momentous hypothesis in all of science A universe with a god would be a completely different kind of universe from one without and it would be a scientific difference God could clinch the matter in his favour at any moment by staging a spectacular demonstration of his powers one that would satisfy the exacting standards of science Even the infamous Templeton Foundation recognized that God is a scientific hypothesis by funding double blind trials to test whether remote prayer would speed the recovery of heart patients It didn t of course although a control group who knew they had been prayed for tended to get worse how about a class action suit against the Templeton Foundation Despite such well financed efforts no evidence for God s existence has yet appeared Seachris Joshua W April 2009 The Meaning of Life as Narrative A New Proposal for Interpreting Philosophy s Primary Question Philo 12 1 5 23 doi 10 5840 philo20091211 Retrieved 2016 04 06 Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry Encyclopaedia Genealogy and Tradition 60067th ed University of Notre Dame Press 1991 ISBN 978 0268018771 Taylor Charles 2007 A Secular Age 1st ed The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674026766 Ratzinger Joseph 2005 Cardinal Ratzinger on Europe s Crisis of Culture Reynolds John Mark 2009 When Athens Met Jerusalem An Introduction to Classical and Christian Thought Downers Grove Ill IVP Academic ISBN 978 0830829231 Pelikan Jaroslav 2001 Athens and or Jerusalem Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 950 1 17 Bibcode 2001NYASA 950 17P doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 2001 tb02124 x S2CID 21347905 Bhagavad Gita Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Hinduism is not just a faith It is the union of reason and intuition that can not be defined but is only to be experienced full citation needed Manktelow K I 1999 Reasoning and Thinking Cognitive Psychology Modular Course Hove Sussex Psychology Press Johnson Laird P N Byrne R M J 1991 Deduction Hillsdale Erlbaum Johnson Laird P N 2006 How we reason Oxford Oxford University Press Byrne R M J 2005 The Rational Imagination How People Create Counterfactual Alternatives to Reality Cambridge Mass MIT Press Demetriou A 1998 Cognitive development In Demetriou A Doise W van Lieshout K F M eds Life span developmental psychology London Wiley pp 179 269 Costantini Stefania 2002 Meta reasoning A Survey Computational Logic Logic Programming and Beyond Lecture Notes in Computer Science vol 2408 2002 pp 253 288 doi 10 1007 3 540 45632 5 11 ISBN 978 3540439608 Mercier Hugo Sperber Dan 2011 Why Do Humans Reason Arguments for an Argumentative Theory Behavioral and Brain Sciences 34 2 57 74 doi 10 1017 S0140525X10000968 PMID 21447233 S2CID 5669039 Mercier Hugo Sperber Dan 2017 The Enigma of Reason Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674368309 a b Aristotle Politics Translated by Simpson Peter Further reading edit nbsp Look up reason in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Reason Reason at PhilPapers Beer Francis A Words of Reason Political Communication 11 Summer 1994 185 201 Gilovich Thomas 1991 How We Know What Isn t So The Fallibility of Human Reason in Everyday Life New York The Free Press ISBN 978 0029117057 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reason amp oldid 1202005853, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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