Yes, several (mostly Dutch) people make that claim, and it’s not a daft one. Don’t confuse formal logic with classical logic!
I’m not sure what you are getting at here. Are you referencing Dutch booking? If so, I fail to see how that’s relevant to Carinthium’s question which is not about what is ideal reasoning but rather how humans actually reason.
No, I am literally referring to logicians in the present-day Netherlands. There are a bunch of people there who look into the use of (non-monotonic, highly non-classical) logics for modeling human reasoning, perhaps most prominently Michiel van Lambalgen.
Yes, several (mostly Dutch) people make that claim, and it’s not a daft one. Don’t confuse formal logic with classical logic!
I’m not sure what you are getting at here. Are you referencing Dutch booking? If so, I fail to see how that’s relevant to Carinthium’s question which is not about what is ideal reasoning but rather how humans actually reason.
No, I am literally referring to logicians in the present-day Netherlands. There are a bunch of people there who look into the use of (non-monotonic, highly non-classical) logics for modeling human reasoning, perhaps most prominently Michiel van Lambalgen.