Paul Thagard
Paul R. Thagard | |
---|---|
Born | 28 Sept 1950 |
Era | 20th-century philosophy |
Region | Western Philosophy |
School | Naturalism |
Main interests | Philosophy of mind Cognitive science Philosophy of science |
Notable ideas | Multi-level interacting mechanisms |
Paul Thagard (born Sept. 28, 1950) is a Canadian philosopher who specializes in philosophy, cognitive science, and the philosophy of science. Thagard is currently a professor of Philosophy at the University of Waterloo, with cross appointment to Psychology and Computer Science. He is the director of the Cognitive Science Program. Thagard is a prolific writer, and has contributed to research in analogy and creativity, inference, cognition in the history of science, and the role of emotion in cognition.
In the philosophy of science, Thagard is enormously well cited for his work on the use of computational models in explaining conceptual revolutions. [1] In the philosophy of mind, he is known for his attempts to apply connectionist models of coherence to theories of human thought and action. [2]
In philosophy, Thagard is sharply critical of analytic philosophy for being overly dependent upon intuitions as a source of evidence, which is a feature he shares in common with researchers in experimental philosophy. [3]
Biography
Thagard was born in Yorkton, Saskatchewan in 1950. He is a graduate of the Universities of Saskatchewan, Cambridge, Toronto (Ph.D. in philosophy, 1977) and Michigan (M.S. in computer science, 1985). He was Chair of the Governing Board of the Cognitive Science Society [1], 1998–1999, and President of the Society for Machines and Mentality [2], 1997-1998. He has held a Canada Council Killam fellowship, and in 1999 was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. In 2003, he received a University of Waterloo Award for Excellence in Research, and in 2005 he was named a University Research Chair.
Coherence
Thagard has proposed that many cognitive functions, including perception, analogy, explanation, decision-making, planning etc., can be understood as a form of (maximum) coherence computation.
Thagard (together with Karsten Verbeurgt) put forth a particular formalization of the concept of coherence as a constraint satisfaction problem. [4]The model posits that coherence operates over a set of representational elements (e.g., propositions, images, etc.) which can either fit together (cohere) or resist fitting together (incohere).
If two elements p and q cohere they are connected by a positive constraint , and if two elements and incohere they are connected by a negative constraint . Furthermore, constraints are weighted, i.e., for each constraint there is a positive weight .
According to Thagard, coherence maximization involves the partitioning of elements into accepted () and rejected () elements in such a way that maximum number (or maximum weight) of constraints is satisfied. Here a positive constraint is said to be satisfied if either both and are accepted () or both and are rejected (). A negative constraint is satisfied if one element is accepted(say ), and the other rejected ().
Philosophy of science
There has been some decrease in interest in the demarcation problem in recent years. Part of the problem is that many suspect that it is an intractable problem, since so many previous attempts have come up short. For example, many obvious examples of pseudoscience have been shown to be falsifiable, or verifiable, or revisable. Therefore many of the previously proposed demarcation criteria have not been judged as particularly reliable.
Thagard has proposed another set of principles to try to overcome these difficulties. According to Thagard's method, a theory is not scientific if:
- It has been less progressive than alternative theories over a long period of time, and faces many unsolved problems; but
- The community of practitioners makes little attempt to develop the theory towards solutions of the problems, shows no concern for attempts to evaluate the theory in relation to others, and is selective in considering confirmations and disconfirmations.[5][6]
Major Works
Thagard is the author / co-author of 11 books and over 100 peer-reviewed articles.
- "The Brain and the Meaning of Life" Princeton University Press, 2010 ISBN 978-1-4008-3461-7
- Hot Thought: Mechanisms and Applications of Emotional Cognition (MIT Press, August, 2006, ISBN 0-262-20164-X)
- Coherence in Thought and Action (Bradford Book, 2000, ISBN 0-262-20131-3)
- How Scientists Explain Disease (Princeton University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-691-00261-4)
- Mind: An Introduction to Cognitive Science (MIT Press, 1996; second edition, 2005, ISBN 0-262-20154-2)(Trad. esp.: La mente, Buenos Aires/Madrid, Katz editores S.A, 2008, ISBN 9788496859210)
- Conceptual Revolutions (Princeton University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-691-02490-1)
- Computational Philosophy of Science (MIT Press, 1988, Bardford Book, 1993, ISBN 0-262-70048-4)
And co-author of:
- Mental Leaps: Analogy in Creative Thought (MIT Press, 1995, ISBN 0-262-08233-0)
- Induction: Processes of Inference, Learning, and Discovery (MIT Press, 1986, Bardford Book, 1989, ISBN 0-262-58096-9)
He is also editor of:
- Philosophy of Psychology and Cognitive Science (North-Holland, 2006, ISBN 0-444-51540-2).
- Thagard, P. and Verbeurgt, K. (1998). Coherence as constraint satisfaction. Cognitive Science, 22: 1-24.
- Thagard, P. (2000). Coherence in Thought and Action. MIT Press.
References
- ^ Google Scholar. http://scholar.google.ca/scholar?q=paul%20thagard&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&hl=en&tab=ws
- ^ Coherence in Thought and Action (Bradford Book, 2000, ISBN 0-262-20131-3)
- ^ "The Brain and the Meaning of Life" Princeton University Press, 2010 ISBN 978-1-4008-3461-7
- ^ Many of Thagard's coherence articles are available online at http://cogsci.uwaterloo.ca/Articles/Pages/Coherence.html
- ^ Why Astrology Is A Pseudoscience, Paul R. Thagard, In Philosophy of Science Association 1978 Volume 1, edited by P.D. Asquith and I. Hacking (East Lansing: Philosophy of Science Association, 1978).
- ^ Demarcation: Is there a Sharp Line Between Science and Pseudoscience? An Exploration of Sir Karl Popper's Conception of Falsification, Ray Hall, web version of slides, The Amaz!ng Meeting II, Las Vegas, January 17, 2004.