The Abductive Structure of Scientific Creativity: An Essay on the Ecology of Cognition

Cham, Switzerland: Springer Verlag (2017)
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Abstract

This book employs a new eco-cognitive model of abduction to underline the distributed and embodied nature of scientific cognition. Its main focus is on the knowledge-enhancing virtues of abduction and on the productive role of scientific models. What are the distinctive features that define the kind of knowledge produced by science? To provide an answer to this question, the book first addresses the ideas of Aristotle, who stressed the essential inferential and distributed role of external cognitive tools and epistemic mediators in abductive cognition. This is analyzed in depth from both a naturalized logic and an ecology of cognition perspective. It is shown how the maximization of cognition, and of abducibility – two typical goals of science – are related to a number of fundamental aspects: the optimization of the eco-cognitive situatedness; the maximization of changeability for both the input and the output of the inferences involved; a high degree of information-sensitiveness; and the need to record the “past life” of abductive inferential practices. Lastly, the book explains how some impoverished epistemological niches – the result of a growing epistemic irresponsibility associated with the commodification and commercialization of science – are now seriously jeopardizing the flourishing development of human creative abduction.

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Chapters

Human Creative Abduction Assaulted

In this chapter I will analyze some important aspects of the organization of Research and Development in the case of biopharmaceutical companies, which represent a prototypical situation of what I call impoverished epistemological niches.

Maximizing Cognition in Science: Affirming Truths Implies Negating Truths

When dealing with the so-called “inferential problem”, which affects current research in logic and epistemology, I will opt for the more general concepts of input and output instead of those of premisses and conclusions.

Enhancing Knowledge

Abduction is a procedure in which something that lacks classical explanatory epistemic virtue can be accepted because it has virtue of another kind: contend that abduction presents an ignorance-preserving or character.

Epistemic Warfare

In this chapter I will illustrate how scientific modeling activity can be better described taking advantage of the concept of “epistemic warfare”, which sees scientific enterprise as a complicated struggle for rational knowledge in which it is crucial to distinguish epistemic from non epistemic weap... see more

Distributed Model-Based Science

In the current epistemological debate scientific models are not only considered as useful devices for explaining facts or discovering new entities, laws, and theories, but also rubricated under various new labels: from the classical ones, as abstract entities and idealizations, to the more recent, a... see more

The Genealogy of Abduction

To further deepen the eco-cognitive character of abduction and hypothetical cognition in science a simple genealogyof logic is provided.

Not Everything in Scientific Cognition Is Evidence-Based

Peirce provides various justifications of the knowledge enhancing role of abduction, even when abduction is not considered an inference to the best explanation in the classical sense of the expression, that is an inference necessarily characterized by an empirical evaluation phase, or inductive phas... see more

Science Maximizes Abducibility

The analysis of abductive processes illustrated in the previous chapters, in terms of the effort to naturalize the logic of its special consequence relation, leads us to the emphasis on the importance of the following main aspects: “optimization of eco-cognitive situatedness”, “maximization of chang... see more

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