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Knowing and the Mystique of Logic and Rules

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Knowing and the Mystique of Logic and Rules Synopsis

Human knowing is examined as it emerges from classical empirical psychology, with its ramifications into language, computing, science, and scholarship. While the discussion takes empirical support from a wide range, claims for the significance of logic and rules are challenged throughout. Highlights of the discussion:

  • knowing is a matter of habits or dispositions that guide the person's stream of consciousness;
  • rules of language have no significance in language production and understanding, being descriptions of linguistic styles;
  • statements that may be true or false enter into ordinary linguistic activity, not as elements of messages, but merely as summaries of situations, with a view to action;
  • in computer programming the significance of logic, proof, and formalized description, is incidental and subject to the programmer's personality;
  • analysis of computer modelling of the mental activity shows that in describing human knowing the computer is irrelevant;
  • in accounting for the scholarly/scientific activity, logic and rules are impotent;
  • a novel theory: scholarship and science have coherent descriptions as their core.
The discussion addresses questions that are basic to advanced applications of computers and to students of language and science.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9789048146093
Publication date:
Author: Peter Naur
Publisher: Springer an imprint of Springer Netherlands
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 380 pages
Series: Studies in Cognitive Systems
Genres: Phenomenology and Existentialism
Cybernetics and systems theory
Philosophy of science
Philosophy of language