Naturalism and modal reasoning

Nenad Mišćević

pp. 149-173

A naturalistic theory of modal intuitions and modal reasoning inspired by Hintikka's theorizing should start from the principle that advanced modal reasoning has its roots in commonsense intuitions. It is proposed that the naturalist can rely on the assumption of uniformity: the same set of basic principles is used in reasoning about actual and counterfactual dependencies - modal cognition is conservative. In the most primitive cases the difference between a model of an actual situation and of a merely possible one lies in its functional and indicational roles, not in its internal make-up. This conjecture enables one to derive important aspects of modal reasoning from the non-modal one. In the final section of the paper a simplified account of such derivation is proposed, drawn partly from connection- ist literature.

Publication details

DOI: 10.5840/gps1994/954910

Full citation:

Mišćević, N. (1994-95). Naturalism and modal reasoning. Grazer Philosophische Studien 49, pp. 149-173.

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