In various contexts, it is thought to be important that we reason together. For instance, an attractive conception of democracy requires that citizens reach lawmaking decisions by reasoning with one another. Reasoning requires that reasoners survey the considerations that they take to be reasons, proceed by a coherent train of thought, and reach conclusions freely. De facto reliance on experts threatens the possibility of collective reasoning by making some reasons collectively unsurveyable, raising questions about the coherence of the resulting train of thought. De jure reliance on experts threatens the possibility of collective reasoning by seeming to make some conclusions irreversible. The paper argues that collective reasoning that relies on experts would nonetheless be possible if the unsurveyable reasons "mesh," if the expert considerations are at least in principle publicly recoverable, and if de jure authority of expert decision is always subject to appeal.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ken.2012.0007 | DOI Listing |
Cognition
December 2024
Department of Psychology & Neuroscience, Duke University 417 Chapel Drive, Box 90086, Durham, NC 27708, USA. Electronic address:
Acting for the greater good often involves paying a personal cost to benefit the collective. In two studies, we investigate how children (N = 184, M = 8.02 years, SD = 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGovernance of biomedical research in the United States has been characterized by ethical individualism, a mode of reasoning that treats the individual person as the center of moral concern and analysis. However, genomics research raises ethics issues that uniquely affect certain genetically related communities as collectives, not merely as aggregates of individuals. This is especially true of identifiable populations-including Indigenous Peoples-that are often minoritized, socially marginalized, or geographically isolated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Psychol
November 2024
Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad Católica de Córdoba, Córdoba, Argentina.
In this paper, we investigate whether collaborative group performance is better than individual performance in solving a syllogism evaluation task. We hypothesise that collaborative group settings will outperform individual settings and that the belief bias effect will be mitigated in a group setting. Two empirical studies were conducted with Argentinian undergraduate students.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
November 2024
Center for Clinical Systems Biology, Rochester General Hospital, Rochester, NY, USA.
We propose that one of the main hurdles in delivering comprehensively informed care results from the challenges surrounding the extraction, representation, and retention of prior clinical experience and basic medical knowledge, as well as its translation into time- and context-informed actionable interventions. While emerging applications in artificial intelligence-based techniques, for example, large language models, offer impressive pattern association capabilities, they often fall short in producing human-readable explanations crucial to their integration into clinical care. Moreover, they require large well-defined and well-integrated data sets that typically conflict with the availability of such data in all but a few areas of medicine, for example, medical imaging and neuroimaging, noninvasive monitoring of bio-electrical activity, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCogn Sci
November 2024
Departamento de Filosofía I, Universidad de Granada.
Many bioliberals endorse broadly consequentialist frameworks in normative ethics, implying that a progressive stance on matters of bioethical controversy could stem from outcome-based reasoning. This raises an intriguing empirical prediction: encouraging outcome-based reflection could yield a shift toward bioliberal views among nonexperts as well. To evaluate this hypothesis, we identified empirical premises that underlie moral disagreements on seven divisive issues (e.
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