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The rational imagination : how people create alternatives to reality
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The rational imagination : how people create alternatives to reality

Author: Ruth M J Byrne
Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2005.
Edition/Format:   Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
"The human imagination remains one of the last uncharted terrains of the mind. This accessible and original monograph explores a central aspect of the imagination, the creation of counterfactual alternatives to reality, and claims that imaginative thoughts are guided by the same principles that underlie rational thoughts. Research has shown that rational thought is more imaginative than cognitive scientists had  Read more...
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Details

Material Type: Internet resource
Document Type: Book, Internet Resource
All Authors / Contributors: Ruth M J Byrne
ISBN: 0262025841 9780262025843
OCLC Number: 57349098
Notes: "A Bradford book."
Description: xiv, 254 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Contents: The counterfacutal imagination --
Imagination and rational thought --
Imagining how actions might have been different --
Thinking about what should have happened --
Causal relations and counterfactuals --
"Even if ..." --
The "last chance" --
Individuals and creative thoughts --
The idea of a rational imigination.
Responsibility: Ruth M.J. Byrne.

Abstract:

"The human imagination remains one of the last uncharted terrains of the mind. This accessible and original monograph explores a central aspect of the imagination, the creation of counterfactual alternatives to reality, and claims that imaginative thoughts are guided by the same principles that underlie rational thoughts. Research has shown that rational thought is more imaginative than cognitive scientists had supposed; in The Rational Imagination, Ruth Byrne argues that imaginative thought is more rational than scientists have imagined." "People often create alternatives to reality and imagine how events might have turned out "if only" something had been different. Byrne explores the "fault lines" of reality, the aspects of reality that are more readily changed in imaginative thoughts. She finds that our tendencies to imagine alternatives to actions, controllable events, socially unacceptable actions, causal and enabling relations, and events that come last in a temporal sequence provide clues to the cognitive processes upon which the counterfactual imagination depends. The explanation of these processes, Byrne argues, rests on the idea that imaginative thought and rational thought have much in common. Book jacket."--Jacket.

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