Jeremy Taylor wrote:
I'd say that inferences don't seem to operate via physical cause and effect. We might say our grasp of the premises and their logical relations causes us to grasp the conclusion, but it isn't physical cause and effect. Indeed, I'm not sure what that would mean.
Remember, physical cause and effect is contingent, but sound deductive inference is necessary.
Very true. I'm wondering if you could help answer an objection from a recent interlocutor of mine. After I gave him reasons to believe that propositional logic cannot be accounted for by the physical cause and effect of neurological processes, he proceeded to deny the existence of logical reasoning entirely, opting for what he referred to as "human reasoning." Under this view human reasoning rests on a continuum, along with "infant reasoning," "pig reasoning," etc. Human reasoning, in his words, would look like this:
"I think 'fire' is a word that me, you, and other english speakers use to describe certain configurations of space at certain times. I think there are edge cases where some speakers might insist that something is just smouldering while others insist that there is fire. I don't think there is some abstract object called 'fire', or that there's a rule for determining when some configuration of space at some particular time is 'fire'.
So when a person burns themselves on fire, I think they form a memory of the relevant sense data, maybe what it looks like, what the heat radiating off it feels like, what crackling noises they make. And if in the future they encounter some more sense data that matches their memory of fire, they'll be less inclined to stick their hand in it. I think other animals do something similar."
On this view, human reasoning is reduced to sensory input and behavioral output. Fire burns->avoid fire. This is, as the animals do. I suppose he may argue that we just have a more embellished way of reasoning.