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Teleological language or teleological thinking?

Taru Tiililä1, Anne Schlottmann1, Christos Bechlivanidis1

  • 1Department of Experimental Psychology, University College London, Bedford Way Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Teleological statements about nature are semantically ambiguous, not necessarily indicating promiscuous teleology. Linguistic framing significantly impacts endorsement by influencing interpretation of purpose versus relation.

Keywords:
Causal reasoningInterpretationLinguistic formulationPromiscuous teleologyTeleological explanation

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Science
  • Philosophy of Science
  • Psychology

Background:

  • Teleological statements, e.g., 'the ozone layer exists to protect from UV light,' are often seen as evidence of 'promiscuous teleology.'
  • This suggests an intuitive human tendency to perceive nature as intentional or agentive.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To challenge the interpretation of teleological statement endorsement as solely indicative of promiscuous teleology.
  • To propose and test a framework distinguishing semantic ambiguity in teleological statements.
  • To investigate the influence of linguistic formulation on the endorsement of teleological claims.

Main Methods:

  • Two studies (N=896) examined how different linguistic connectives ('in order to' vs. others) affect endorsement.
  • Participants' justifications for their endorsements were analyzed.
  • Probe judgments assessed endorsement across three interpretive levels: relation, function/purpose, and purposive-causal origins.

Main Results:

  • Statements using 'in order to' were endorsed more readily than those with other connectives.
  • Most participants did not interpret teleological statements as claims about origins; those who did were less likely to endorse.
  • Strong endorsement for relational claims, uncertainty for function/purpose claims, and rejection of purposive-causal origin claims were observed.

Conclusions:

  • Endorsement of teleological statements does not necessarily equate to promiscuous teleology.
  • Distinguishing teleological language from teleological thinking is crucial.
  • Semantic ambiguity and a tendency to view processes as outcome-directed, rather than misconceptions of causation, may explain endorsement.