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May 2012
ISBN 0262017288
384 pp.
37 illus.
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The Cognitive Science of Science
Paul Thagard

Many disciplines, including philosophy, history, and sociology, have attempted to make sense of how science works. In this book, Paul Thagard examines scientific development from the interdisciplinary perspective of cognitive science. Cognitive science combines insights from researchers in many fields: philosophers analyze historical cases, psychologists carry out behavioral experiments, neuroscientists perform brain scans, and computer modelers write programs that simulate thought processes.

Thagard develops cognitive perspectives on the nature of explanation, mental models, theory choice, and resistance to scientific change, considering disbelief in climate change as a case study. He presents a series of studies that describe the psychological and neural processes that have led to breakthroughs in science, medicine, and technology. He shows how discoveries of new theories and explanations lead to conceptual change, with examples from biology, psychology, and medicine. Finally, he shows how the cognitive science of science can integrate descriptive and normative concerns; and he considers the neural underpinnings of certain scientific concepts.

Table of Contents
 Preface
I Introduction
1 What Is the Cognitive Science of Science?
II Explanation and Justification
2 Why Explanation Matters
3 Models of Scientific Explanation
4 How Brains Make Mental Models
5 Changing Minds about Climate Change: Belief Revision, Coherence, and Emotion
6 Coherence, Truth, and the Development of Scientific Knowledge
III Discovery and Creativity
7 Why Discovery Matters
8 The Aha! Experience: Creativity through Emergent Binding in Neural Networks
9 Creative Combination of Representations: Scientific Discovery and Technological Invention
10 Creativity in Computer Science
11 Patterns of Medical Discovery
IV Conceptual Change
12 Why Conceptual Change Matters
13 Conceptual Change in the History of Science: Life, Mind, and Disease
14 Getting to Darwin: Obstacles to Accepting Evolution by Natural Selection
15 Acupuncture, Incommensurability, and Conceptual Change
16 Conceptual Change in Medicine: Explanations of Mental Illness from Demons to Epigenetics
V New Directions
17 Values in Science: Cognitive-Affective Maps
18 Scientific Concepts as Semantic Pointers
 References
 Acknowledgments
 Index
 
 


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