CWB Philosophy of Science Lecture Series

- 'Truthlikeness, rationality, and cognition'
4:00pm - 6:00pm
Academic Building, Room 3301

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The idea that science—and human knowledge more broadly—aims to approach the truth about the world is widely shared among scientists, philosophers, and laypeople. The theory of truthlikeness (verisimilitude, truth approximation) makes this idea precise. Over the last 50 years, truthlikeness has garnered attention primarily within a narrow circle of logicians and philosophers of science, remaining largely overlooked by psychologists and cognitive scientists. This paper proposes truthlikeness theory, and more broadly cognitive decision theory, as a valuable framework for future empirical research in cognitive sciences. We argue that truthlikeness offers a normative perspective that can complement and enhance existing approaches in the study of human reasoning and decision-making. By examining selected case studies, we demonstrate how truthlikeness theory can serve as a benchmark for designing experiments, interpreting empirical results, and enriching debates on human rationality. Specifically, we show how many so-called biases or fallacies, documented by psychologists and purportedly demonstrating human irrationality, may be construed as rational strategies to balance informativeness and truth in belief, judgment, and decision-making. 

Event Format
Speakers / Performers:
Gustavo Cevolani
IMT Lucca

Gustavo Cevolani is the Full Professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, where he leads the Models, Inference, and Decisions (MInD) group of the Molecular Mind Laboratory (MoMiLab) research unit.

His current research interests are in general philosophy of science, formal epistemology, and cognitive science, with a focus on rational decisions in scientific and ordinary reasoning, the notion of cognitive progress, and methodological issues of social and behavioral sciences.

Language
English
Recommended For
Faculty and staff
PG students
UG students
More Information

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Organizer
Academy of Interdisciplinary Studies
Contact

For general enquiries, please email philsci@ust.hk.

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