Literature DB >> 26689704

Defeasible reasoning with legal conditionals.

Lupita Estefania Gazzo Castañeda1, Markus Knauff2.   

Abstract

Valid conclusions can be defeated if people can think of conditions that prevent the consequent to occur although the antecedent is given. The goal of the present research was to investigate how people consider these conditions when reasoning with legal conditionals such as "If a person kills another human, then this person should be punished for manslaughter." In Experiments 1 and 2 legal conditionals were presented to participants together with exculpatory circumstances, i.e., counterexamples. The participants' task was to decide whether they would adhere to the legal conditional rule and punish the offender. Participants were either lawyers (i.e., advanced law students and graduate lawyers) or legal laypeople. We found that laypeople often ignore exculpatory circumstances and adhere to the conditional rule when offences evoked high levels of moral outrage. Lawyers did not show this effect. In Experiment 3 laypeople showed difficulties even when asked to simply imagine exculpatory circumstances for highly morally outrageous offences. Results provide new evidence for the role of emotions--like moral outrage--in the consideration of counterexamples to legal conditionals.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Conditionals; Counterexamples; Defeasible reasoning; Legal reasoning

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26689704     DOI: 10.3758/s13421-015-0574-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mem Cognit        ISSN: 0090-502X


  35 in total

1.  Suppression of valid inferences and knowledge structures: the curious effect of producing alternative antecedents on reasoning with causal conditionals.

Authors:  H Markovits; F Potvin
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2001-07

2.  Consequential conditionals: invited and suppressed inferences from valued outcomes.

Authors:  Jean-François Bonnefon; Denis J Hilton
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Learn Mem Cogn       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 3.051

3.  Inference suppression and semantic memory retrieval: every counterexample counts.

Authors:  Wim De Neys; Walter Schaeken; Géry d'Ydewalle
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2003-06

4.  A theory of utility conditionals: Paralogical reasoning from decision-theoretic leakage.

Authors:  Jean-François Bonnefon
Journal:  Psychol Rev       Date:  2009-10       Impact factor: 8.934

5.  Semantic interpretation as computation in nonmonotonic logic: the real meaning of the suppression task.

Authors:  Keith Stenning; Michiel Lambalgen
Journal:  Cogn Sci       Date:  2005-11-12

6.  Naive theories and causal deduction.

Authors:  D D Cummins
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1995-09

7.  Interpretational factors in conditional reasoning.

Authors:  V A Thompson
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  1994-11

8.  The effect of negative emotion on deductive reasoning: examining the contribution of physiological arousal.

Authors:  Isabelle Blanchette; Joanna Leese
Journal:  Exp Psychol       Date:  2011

Review 9.  Dual-processing accounts of reasoning, judgment, and social cognition.

Authors:  Jonathan St B T Evans
Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 24.137

10.  How emotions affect logical reasoning: evidence from experiments with mood-manipulated participants, spider phobics, and people with exam anxiety.

Authors:  Nadine Jung; Christina Wranke; Kai Hamburger; Markus Knauff
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-06-10
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  2 in total

1.  Utilitarian Moral Judgment Exclusively Coheres with Inference from Is to Ought.

Authors:  Shira Elqayam; Meredith R Wilkinson; Valerie A Thompson; David E Over; Jonathan St B T Evans
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2017-06-22

2.  Specificity effects in reasoning with counterintuitive and arbitrary conditionals.

Authors:  Lupita Estefania Gazzo Castañeda; Markus Knauff
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2021-09-23
  2 in total

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