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Reasoning About Want.

Hillary Harner1, Sangeet Khemlani2

  • 1Altamira Technologies Corporation.

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|August 25, 2022
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

New research introduces a model-based theory for desire predicates like "want," suggesting they contrast desires with facts. This implies that what someone wants is typically not yet true, a key finding validated by seven experiments.

Keywords:
Bouletic reasoningDesire predicatesDual processesMental modelsWant

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Science
  • Linguistics
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Current theories lack explanation for real-world inferences from desire predicates (e.g., 'want').
  • Linguistic accounts define 'want' based on beliefs and desirability, not factual contrast.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose and validate a new model-based theory for understanding desire predicates.
  • To explain how people reason about desires in relation to facts.

Main Methods:

  • Developed a novel theory positing that desire predicates default to contrasting desires against facts.
  • Conducted seven experiments to test empirical predictions of the theory.

Main Results:

  • The theory predicts that 'A wants P' implies 'P is not the case' by default.
  • Reasoners may infer beliefs about the non-occurrence of P, without certainty.
  • Experimental results validated the theory's central predictions regarding desire interpretation and inference.

Conclusions:

  • The proposed model-based theory offers a novel explanation for desire predicate reasoning.
  • Findings suggest a default contrast between desires and current facts in human cognition.