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Prescriptive Reasoning (Paperback)
Loot Price: R494
Discovery Miles 4 940
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Prescriptive Reasoning (Paperback)
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Loot Price R494
Discovery Miles 4 940
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This series of books presents the fundamentals of logic in a style
accessible to both students and scholars. The text of each essay
presents a story, the main line of development of the ideas, while
the notes and appendices place the research within a larger
scholarly context. The essays overlap, forming a unified analysis
of logic as the art of reasoning well, yet each essay is designed
so that it may be read independently. The topic of this volume is
prescriptive reasoning. Descriptive claims say how the world is,
was, or will be; prescriptive claims say how the world should be.
We have fairly clear rules for reasoning with descriptive claims.
The goal of the first essay, "Reasoning with Prescriptive Claims,"
is to clarify how to reason with prescriptive ones. The first step
in doing so is to justify our viewing prescriptions as true or
false. That justification is part of a general approach to
reasoning in which many kinds of personal evaluations are taken to
be true-false divisions. That view has been implicit if not
explicit in analyses of reasoning from formal logic through
argument analysis. in "Truth and Reasoning" I set out reasons for
adopting that methodology. Theories, too, seem to be descriptive or
prescriptive. Some say how the world is, others how the world
should be. Yet, as shown in "Prescriptive Theories?," on close
examination the distinction evaporates. Unless, that is, one says
that certain theories about values use an entirely different notion
of truth than is used in science and is codified in our usual
methods of reasoning. Absent that, there seems to be no
justification for constructing and evaluating what are typically
thought of as prescriptive theories differently from descriptive
ones. Many discussions of how to evaluate prescriptive claims are
given in terms of what is rational or irrational to do. In the
final essay, "Rationality," what we mean by the idea of someone
being rational is investigated and the limitations of that label in
evaluating reasoning or actions is shown.
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