Naturalized Rationality. A Glance At Bolzano's Philosophy Of Mind
Author(s) -
Anita Konzelmann-Ziv
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
the baltic international yearbook of cognition logic and communication
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1944-3676
DOI - 10.4148/biyclc.v4i0.139
Subject(s) - epistemology , metaphysics , heuristics , virtue , rationality , philosophy of mind , philosophy , simple (philosophy) , psychology , computer science , operating system
The paper outlines the proximity of Bolzano’s account of “mental forces” to contemporary accounts of faculty psychology such as Modularity Theory and Simple Heuristics. While the modularist notions of domain specificity and encapsulated mental faculties align with Bolzano’s allotment of domain specific tasks to correspondingly specified psychological forces (e.g. judging to “judgmental force”, inferring to “inferential force” etc.), the emphasis of Simple Heuristics on accurate “fast and frugal” processes aligns with Bolzano’s views regarding cognitive resources and the importance of epistemic economy. The paper attempts to show how Bolzano’s metaphysics of mind supposes a conception of bound rationality that determines his epistemology. Combining the rationalist concern for epistemic agent responsibility in the pursuit of knowledge with a strong confidence in the reliability of causal processes to generate the right beliefs, his epistemology shows close affinities with contemporary Virtue Epistemology. According to Virtue Epistemology, knowledge requires that true beliefs be generated by reliable processes typical of a virtuous character. The thesis that Bolzano anticipates virtue epistemological considerations is corroborated by his discussion of heuristic principles that set the norms for the acquisition of knowledge. The paper explores possible relations between such principles and the presumed low-level heuristics of cognitive processes
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