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6 - Identifying Cognitive Constructiveness

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2020

Thora Tenbrink
Affiliation:
Bangor University
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Summary

Chapter 6 addresses two ways in which our minds can be constructive: either by making inferences on the basis of what’s already there – filling in gaps of information, or by transforming what’s there into something new. This twofold ability of the human mind to construct is basic to our existence, enabling us to go beyond what we encounter around us. The way we talk reflects both inference and transformation processes systematically. Inference involves taking observable facts and combining them with further knowledge or assumptions, in order to come to new insights or conclusions that aren’t directly observable. Transformation, on the other hand, involves taking observable facts or objects and turning them into something different, something that isn’t yet there but that can be accomplished using available tools and operators. Chapter 6 looks at each of these processes of cognitive constructiveness in turn.

Type
Chapter
Information
Cognitive Discourse Analysis
An Introduction
, pp. 142 - 167
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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