SECTIONS
SEARCH
SKIP TO CONTENT
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/03/books/review/rationality-steven-pinker.html#site-content>SKIP
TO SITE INDEX
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/03/books/review/rationality-steven-pinker.html#site-index>
<https://www.nytimes.com/>
PLAY THE CROSSWORD
<https://www.nytimes.com/subscription/games/lp8J6KQ?campaignId=6F88R>
Account
<https://www.nytimes.com/section/books/review>
<https://www.nytimes.com/> <https://www.nytimes.com/>

   -
   
<https://www.facebook.com/dialog/feed?app_id=9869919170&link=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dfb-share&name=In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2F>
   -
   
<https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dwa-share>
   -
   
<https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dtw-share&text=In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99>
   -
   
<?subject=NYTimes.com%3A%20In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99&body=From%20The%20New%20York%20Times%3A%0A%0AIn%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99%0A%0AIn%20his%20new%20book%2C%20the%20Harvard%20psychologist%20Steven%20Pinker%20makes%20an%20argument%20for%20rational%20thinking%20and%20reminds%20us%20of%20how%20it%E2%80%99s%20done.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dem-share>
   -
   -
   -

<https://www.nytimes.com/?name=styln-books-general&region=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_MenuHomepageLink_recirc&action=click&pgtype=Article&variant=1_Show>What
to Read
<https://www.nytimes.com/section/books?name=styln-books-general&region=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_menu_recirc&action=click&pgtype=Article&variant=1_Show>

   - Fall Preview
   
<https://www.nytimes.com/spotlight/new-books-fall-2021?name=styln-books-general&region=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_menu_recirc&action=click&pgtype=Article&variant=1_Show&is_new=false>
   - New Books for October
   
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/29/books/new-october-books.html?name=styln-books-general&region=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_menu_recirc&action=click&pgtype=Article&variant=1_Show&is_new=false>
   - What Is the Best Book?
   
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/books/best-book-nominate.html?name=styln-books-general&region=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_menu_recirc&action=click&pgtype=Article&variant=1_Show&is_new=false>
   - Listen: The Book Review Podcast
   
<https://www.nytimes.com/column/book-review-podcast?name=styln-books-general&region=TOP_BANNER&block=storyline_menu_recirc&action=click&pgtype=Article&variant=1_Show&is_new=false>

NONFICTION
In Praise of ‘Rationality’

   -
   
<https://www.facebook.com/dialog/feed?app_id=9869919170&link=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dfb-share&name=In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.facebook.com%2F>
   -
   
<https://api.whatsapp.com/send?text=In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99%20https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dwa-share>
   -
   
<https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dtw-share&text=In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99>
   -
   
<?subject=NYTimes.com%3A%20In%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99&body=From%20The%20New%20York%20Times%3A%0A%0AIn%20Praise%20of%20%E2%80%98Rationality%E2%80%99%0A%0AIn%20his%20new%20book%2C%20the%20Harvard%20psychologist%20Steven%20Pinker%20makes%20an%20argument%20for%20rational%20thinking%20and%20reminds%20us%20of%20how%20it%E2%80%99s%20done.%0A%0Ahttps%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2021%2F10%2F03%2Fbooks%2Freview%2Frationality-steven-pinker.html%3Fsmid%3Dem-share>
   -
   -
   -
   -

Credit...Tucker Nichols
BUY BOOK ▾

When you purchase an independently reviewed book through our site, we earn
an affiliate commission.

By Anthony Gottlieb

   - Oct. 3, 2021

RATIONALITY
What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters
By Steven Pinker

“Everything that runs has feet; the river runs; therefore the river has
feet.” For more than half a millennium, starting in the 12th century, young
men in Europe were routinely tortured with such puzzles. Their first
college years were full of logic, mostly derived from Aristotle, who
identified 14 main types of valid deduction and 13 key gambits of
sophistical trickery. Such lessons were thought to do you good. One Oxford
professor wrote in 1700 that they were more useful to a gentleman than
learning to ride, dance or sing.

“Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters,” a new book
by Steven Pinker, the Harvard psychologist, is in large part a primer on
how to reason well. Similar guides for the general reader have been around
for a while. John Locke wrote one over 300 years ago to help treat
“miscarriages” of mortal reason. He conjectured that angels might lack our
natural defects in logic, and thus have no need of books like his. In the
1800s, Jeremy Bentham, a social reformer, produced a guide to the tricks
used in Britain’s Parliament, where the
“give-the-dog-a-bad-name-and-hang-him argument” and the
“eulogizing-lumping-classifier’s device” were supposedly rife. A list of
over 30 less awkwardly named sophisms is in the most popular modern example
of the genre, from the 1930s, “Straight and Crooked Thinking,” by Robert
Thouless, which was reprinted as recently as 2011.

One difference between Pinker’s primer and these older works is that you’ll
find more numbers in his. Probability and statistics now loom large in both
straight and crooked thinking, but logic manuals generally offered only
small bites of such fare. The main courses were usually a parade of
fallacies, explained in words, plus formal deductive logic (which strips
inferences to their skeletons, such as “Some A are B; therefore some B are
A”). Pinker has now added comprehensive lessons on statistical
significance, how to update your beliefs in the light of fresh data, how to
calculate risks and rewards in decision-making and more. Graphics abound.
To the logicians’ traditional Venn diagrams — illustrations that resemble
bunches of party balloons — he adds bell curves and other graphs.

Plenty of this is unavoidably hard going. Formulas of conditional
probability, in particular, may make some wistful for the torture of
medieval syllogisms. Yet Pinker rightly treats the subject as valuable for
clear thinking. Fumbling its application can, as he observes, lead to
hypochondria and scaremongering — though a dose of math does not provide
total protection against either. These lessons are taught well. Pinker’s
jaunty demotic and occasional bar-stool sermons will not be to everyone’s
taste, but the illustrative gags and cartoons are pedagogically apt. His
deployment of perhaps the finest of Jewish sex jokes as a tool to explain
the concept of “confounding variables” may deserve some sort of prize.
Image
[image: Steven Pinker]
Steven PinkerCredit...Rose Lincoln

Pinker’s book does more than just lay out how we ought to reason. It also
seeks to explain why our efforts often seem to fall short. Experimental
psychology has had a lot to say on the matter in the past half-century or
so, and news from the laboratory can make for grim reading. Even the
simplest inferences seem to go awry for many people.

Psychologists have examined how their human guinea pigs grasp and use a
basic form of valid inference known to logicians as *modus tollens*: “If P
then Q. Not Q. Therefore not P.” It seems from experiments that about
one-third of people don’t get it. And some studies find that most people
think the following fallacious form of inference is logically valid: “If P
then Q. Q. Therefore P.” Unkind logicians have dubbed this fallacy *modus
morons*.

The best-known logic-defying experiment was first reported in 1981, by Amos
Tversky, who died in 1996, and his colleague Daniel Kahneman, who was later
awarded the Nobel in economic science for their work. In this experiment,
you are given some background information about a fictitious woman, Linda,
that makes it sound plausible that she is a feminist. You are then given
several descriptions of her and asked to judge which are more likely to be
true. They include: (1) “Linda is a bank teller”; (2) “Linda is a bank
teller and is active in the feminist movement.” When groups of students
were given this test, a large majority judged that (2) was more likely than
(1). Yet according to the laws of probability, that answer makes no sense.
It is like thinking you are more likely to be dealt the Queen of Hearts
than you are to be dealt a Queen. One possibility is that in this context,
some students took (1) to mean that Linda was a bank teller but not an
active feminist. This would make their answer reasonable; but the morals to
be drawn from the case are still contested.
Image

Kahneman and Tversky dissected rationality with dozens of ingeniously
designed tests, many of which asked people to choose between gambles with
given probabilities and rewards. Their work, and that of others, led to the
naming of over a hundred quirks and apparent biases. In economics, these
experiments showed that our simple assumptions about what people want and
what drives their decision-making are even more unrealistic than was
thought. But what are the implications for logic? Are people hopelessly
vulnerable to *modus morons*, or are these logic tests too artificial, and
thus misleading? Pinker’s view, ably defended, is that our faculties work
well in some settings but go wrong “when applied at scale, in novel
circumstances, or in the service of other goals.”

Pinker devotes plenty of space to advocating rationality, which the authors
of similar works have not found necessary to do, perhaps because anybody
who chooses to read about rationality is probably already in favor of it.
There is a “pandemic of poppycock,” he thinks, and more logic is needed.
You might think it was impossible to exaggerate the popularity of
ill-founded beliefs, but Pinker does manage it. For example, he cites a
Gallup survey that found 42 percent of Americans believe in demonic
possession. Yet Gallup itself rejected that result because it could not
tell how many people took its question literally. Pinker also writes that
“more than two billion people believe that if one doesn’t accept Jesus as
one’s savior one will be damned to eternal torment in hell.” This bogus
statistic includes every nominal Christian on the planet.

Like John Locke before him, Pinker wants more lessons in schools about
reasoning and critical thinking. There is some evidence that such lessons
work. But what part of the curriculum should be scaled back to make room
for them? According to one analysis of Department of Education data, fewer
than half of American adults are proficient at reading. And according to
one Department of Health study, a third of adults have difficulty
interpreting simple health information, such as the instructions on a drug
label. Maybe it is wise to learn to walk before you learn to run.
Site Information Navigation

   - © 2021 The New York Times Company
   <https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us/articles/115014792127-Copyright-notice>


   - NYTCo <https://www.nytco.com/>
   - Contact Us
   <https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us/articles/115015385887-Contact-Us>
   - Accessibility
   <https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us/articles/115015727108-Accessibility>
   - Work with us <https://www.nytco.com/careers/>
   - Advertise <https://nytmediakit.com/>
   - T Brand Studio <http://www.tbrandstudio.com/>
   - Your Ad Choices
   <https://www.nytimes.com/privacy/cookie-policy#how-do-i-manage-trackers>
   - Privacy Policy <https://www.nytimes.com/privacy/privacy-policy>
   - Terms of Service
   <https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us/articles/115014893428-Terms-of-service>
   - Terms of Sale
   <https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us/articles/115014893968-Terms-of-sale>
   - Site Map <https://www.nytimes.com/sitemap/>
   - Help <https://help.nytimes.com/hc/en-us>
   - Subscriptions <https://www.nytimes.com/subscription?campaignId=37WXW>


Em sáb., 9 de out. de 2021 às 11:40, Walter Carnielli <walte...@unicamp.br>
escreveu:

> Impenetrável paywall, infelizmente...
> Nem o Outline consegue acessar...
>
>
> Em sáb., 9 de out. de 2021 08:07, Joao Marcos <botoc...@gmail.com>
> escreveu:
>
>> uma rescensão do novo livro de Steven Pinker
>>
>> https://www.nytimes.com/2021/10/03/books/review/rationality-steven-pinker.html
>>
>>
>> JM
>>
>> --
>> Você recebeu essa mensagem porque está inscrito no grupo "LOGICA-L" dos
>> Grupos do Google.
>> Para cancelar inscrição nesse grupo e parar de receber e-mails dele,
>> envie um e-mail para logica-l+unsubscr...@dimap.ufrn.br.
>> Para ver essa discussão na Web, acesse
>> https://groups.google.com/a/dimap.ufrn.br/d/msgid/logica-l/CAO6j_LjGVh%2BD2N0%3DDHvB6-K%2BMOyiL%2BxjdGCMPNRU65g9B7KfEg%40mail.gmail.com
>> <https://groups.google.com/a/dimap.ufrn.br/d/msgid/logica-l/CAO6j_LjGVh%2BD2N0%3DDHvB6-K%2BMOyiL%2BxjdGCMPNRU65g9B7KfEg%40mail.gmail.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>
>> .
>>
> --
> Você recebeu essa mensagem porque está inscrito no grupo "LOGICA-L" dos
> Grupos do Google.
> Para cancelar inscrição nesse grupo e parar de receber e-mails dele, envie
> um e-mail para logica-l+unsubscr...@dimap.ufrn.br.
> Para ver essa discussão na Web, acesse
> https://groups.google.com/a/dimap.ufrn.br/d/msgid/logica-l/CAOrCsLfNx2qzvL4vD50vGonXPcnnt4d3UiWU%3D3yj-ce5t%3DdeTg%40mail.gmail.com
> <https://groups.google.com/a/dimap.ufrn.br/d/msgid/logica-l/CAOrCsLfNx2qzvL4vD50vGonXPcnnt4d3UiWU%3D3yj-ce5t%3DdeTg%40mail.gmail.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>
> .
>


-- 
Marcelo Finger
 Departament of Computer Science, IME-USP
 http://www.ime.usp.br/~mfinger
 ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1391-1175
 ResearcherID: A-4670-2009

Instituto de Matemática e Estatística,

Universidade de São Paulo

Rua do Matão, 1010 - CEP 05508-090 - São Paulo, SP

-- 
Você está recebendo esta mensagem porque se inscreveu no grupo "LOGICA-L" dos 
Grupos do Google.
Para cancelar inscrição nesse grupo e parar de receber e-mails dele, envie um 
e-mail para logica-l+unsubscr...@dimap.ufrn.br.
Para ver esta discussão na web, acesse 
https://groups.google.com/a/dimap.ufrn.br/d/msgid/logica-l/CAGG7Aw3onP%3DoPyVf3BbseehFiG0eaALtVG7YZg-75vtvwCDWKg%40mail.gmail.com.

Responder a