Dual-Process Theories of Numerical Cognition

Cham: Springer Verlag (2018)
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Abstract

This book presents a philosophical interpretation to numerical cognition based on dual process theories and heuristics. It shows how investigations in cognitive science can shed light on issues traditionally raised by philosophers of mathematics. The analysis will also help readers to better understand the relationship between current neuroscientific research and the philosophical reflection on mathematics. The author seeks to explain the acquisition of mathematical concepts. To accomplish this, he needs to answer two questions. How can the concepts of approximate numerosity become an object of thought that is so accessible to our consciousness? How are these concepts refined and specified in such a way as to become numbers? Unfortunately, there is currently no model that can truly demonstrate the role of language in the development of numerical skills starting from approximate pre-verbal skills. However, the author details a solution to this problem: dual process theories. It is an approach widely used by theorists focusing on reasoning, decision making, social cognition, and consciousness. Here, he applies this approach to the studies on mathematical knowledge. He details the results brought about by psychological and neuroscientific studies conducted on numerical cognition by key neuroscientists. In the process, he develops the foundations of a new, potential philosophical explanation on mathematical knowledge.

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Chapters

Dual Process Theories for Calculus

The dual process theories are popular in many domains of psychology, such as reasoning, decision making, social cognition, cognitive development, clinical psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. In the last chapter, this theoretical approach is applied, for the first time, to the studies on numerica... see more

Introduction

Using numbers to trade, classify, and sort goods and items may seem an easy, convenient, and almost ordinary task. This fact in itself could seem surprising, since numbers are—as Adam Smith famously said,—“among the most abstract ideas which the human mind is capable of forming”. If it were to be tr... see more

The System 1

This chapter is devoted to the discovery of the core abilities underlying human numerical cognition. Neuroscientists hypothesises that human beings are born with a “number sense” that they share with other animals and that this instinct is the expression of the functioning of a “mental organ”, a set... see more

Dissociations Between System 1 and System 2

Calculation ability represents an extremely complex cognitive process. It has been understood to represent a multifactor skill, including verbal, spatial, memory, and executive function abilities. In this chapter, we will deal with it by calculation disturbances are analyzed. Specifically, evidence ... see more

The System 2

We think that the numbers are accurate, that tells us the truth, and that are not exposed to any interpretation. Consequently, the numbers are merely numbers, regardless of the context in which they occur, regardless of the culture of single population. However, in recent years there have been some ... see more

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