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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 34
Issue 2 |
| Apr 01, 2011 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 34 :
Issue 2
Table of Contents
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Why do humans reason? Arguments for an argumentative theory

Hugo Mercier and Dan Sperber
Page 57
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Arguing, reasoning, and the interpersonal (cultural) functions of human consciousness

Roy F. Baumeister, E. J. Masicampo and C. Nathan DeWall
Page 74
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Regret and justification as a link from argumentation to consequentialism

Terry Connolly and Jochen Reb
Page 75
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Reasoning as a lie detection device

Jean-Louis Dessalles
Page 76
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Reasoning is for thinking, not just for arguing

Jonathan St. B. T. Evans
Page 77
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Artificial cognitive systems: Where does argumentation fit in?

John Fox
Page 78
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Reasoning, argumentation, and cognition

Keith Frankish
Page 79
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Reasoning as deliberative in function but dialogic in structure and origin

Peter Godfrey-Smith and Kritika Yegnashankaran
Page 80
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The argumentative theory of reasoning applies to scientists and philosophers, too

John A. Johnson
Page 81
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True to the power of one? Cognition, argument, and reasoning

Drew Michael Khlentzos and Bruce Stevenson
Page 82
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What people may do versus can do

Deanna Kuhn
Page 83
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Putting reasoning and judgement in their proper argumentative place

Mike Oaksford
Page 84
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On the design and function of rational arguments

John E. Opfer and Vladimir Sloutsky
Page 85
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What is argument for? An adaptationist approach to argument and debate

David Pietraszewski
Page 86
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You can't have your hypothesis and test it: The importance of utilities in theories of reasoning

Fenna H. Poletiek
Page 87
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When reasoning is persuasive but wrong

Robert J. Sternberg
Page 88
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The chronometrics of confirmation bias: Evidence for the inhibition of intuitive judgements

Edward J. N. Stupple and Linden J. Ball
Page 89
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Spontaneous inferences provide intuitive beliefs on which reasoning proper depends

James S. Uleman, Laura M. Kressel and SoYon Rim
Page 90
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Query theory: Knowing what we want by arguing with ourselves

Elke U. Weber and Eric J. Johnson
Page 91
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Reasoning, robots, and navigation: Dual roles for deductive and abductive reasoning

Janet Wiles
Page 92
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Deliberative democracy and epistemic humility

Kevin Chien-Chang Wu
Page 93
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Argumentation: Its adaptiveness and efficacy

Hugo Mercier and Dan Sperber
Page 94
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BBS volume 34 issue 2 Cover and Back matter

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BBS volume 34 issue 2 Cover and Front matter

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