Good question, John,

It wouldn't surprise me if we could reconstruct artistic work as forms of
deduction, induction, and abduction. I know of at least one article that
tries to do that.   But rational reconstruction is like that bubble in the
kingfisher's head that gives the formula for refraction by the surface of
the water.  Lord knows how it is actually done.  

I guess I have no idea what kinds of procedures one would have to do to
settle the matter.  I wouldn't trust asking the artist because that would
almost demand a rationalization.  I would have to watch a painting develop.
Nick

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

-----Original Message-----
From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Kennison
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2014 4:49 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] "rational"

Concerning the statement:

>> My intuition tells me that all thinking is rational - it's just that most
of it is weak or founded on truly crazy premises.

I think this is one of the issues to be explored. It seems to work for the
person who believes that every statement in the bible is literally true.
(And maybe has a further belief ambiguities and apparent contradictions can
be resolved by contacting God through prayer.) My own tendency to believe
what I see seems to require that I don't have hallucinations --or could
distinguish them from true visual perceptions.

But what about the thinking done by an artist when creating a work of art.
Is it rational but based on strange axioms, or it is a different type of
thinking which is non-rational And if the former, how does the artist come
up with the strange hypotheses? 
What about intuition, including the intuition that all thinking is rational
but possibly with crazy hypotheses?

________________________________________
From: Friam [[email protected]] on behalf of Nick Thompson
[[email protected]]
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2014 5:02 PM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group'
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] "rational"

This is the kind of discussion that a Newly Minted Peircean, such as myself,
should be all over, but I find myself oddly (thankfully?) reticient.  My
intuition tells me that all thinking is rational - it's just that most of it
is weak or founded on truly crazy premises. Among valid inferences, Peirce
made a distinction between strong inferences (All ravens are black, this
bird is a raven, this bird is black) and weak ones such as "this bird is a
raven, this bird is black, all ravens are black" (induction)  and "this bird
is black, all ravens are black, this bird is a raven"(abduction).   But he
regarded all three as valid forms of inference.  In this spirit, I might
argue that right wing thinking is not irrational, but exceedingly weak.
But we should beware of falling for the syllogism, "This guy is wrong, all
right-wingers are wrong, this guy is a right winger" which is valid, but
horribly weak.

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Roger Critchlow
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2014 12:20 PM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] "rational"


On Sun, Jan 5, 2014 at 11:41 AM, glen
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
[ ... ]
Now, that carries us to how/whether/why humans would use irrational
inference procedures.  But I think we would _need_ some evidence that people
actually use irrational reasoning procedures.  I think even so-called
"irrational" things like _emotions_ are, somewhere deep down, rational.
Those emotions are an evolutionarily selected decision-making ability that
has its own calculus.

Bob Altemeyer's research on right-wing authoritarian (RWA) personalities --
pdf at http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~altemey/ -- finds that high scoring RWAs
suffer from severe cognitive disabilities which essentially render them
immune to reason.  (Note that "right-wing" here is a technical term meaning
"adherent of the status quo".)

But research reveals that authoritarian followers drive through life under
the influence of impaired thinking a lot more than most people do,
exhibiting sloppy reasoning, highly compartmentalized beliefs, double
standards, hypocrisy, self-blindness, a profound ethnocentrism, and--to top
it all off--a ferocious dogmatism that makes it unlikely anyone could ever
change their minds with evidence or logic.

There's an article in today's Times,
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/05/business/media/banished-for-questioning-th
e-gospel-of-guns.html, which unintentionally makes the case that the gun
rights lobby is essentially a coalition of right-wing authoritarians and gun
manufacturers.  They cannot tolerate any discussion of the dogma because
they are incapable of reasoning on the subject, only able to distinguish the
party line from apostasy so they can attack the enemies.

Just because there is a reason to be a lynch mob doesn't make a lynch mob
reasonable.  I think you're confounding the rationality of explanation with
the rationality of the explained.

-- rec --

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