I really like the distinction they draw between ‘empirical logicism’ (believing that thinking reflects some internalised form of classical logic) and ‘prescriptive logicism’ (believing that thinking should be measured against logic and evaluated on how closely it conforms). Not to say they have a point at all (I haven’t read far enough to decide) but that distinction is going to be really useful in explaining parts of rationality—“I don’t think human brains work this way; I think they should, though”.
I really like the distinction they draw between ‘empirical logicism’ (believing that thinking reflects some internalised form of classical logic) and ‘prescriptive logicism’ (believing that thinking should be measured against logic and evaluated on how closely it conforms). Not to say they have a point at all (I haven’t read far enough to decide) but that distinction is going to be really useful in explaining parts of rationality—“I don’t think human brains work this way; I think they should, though”.