Litcius/Paper detail

Failure of hypothesis evaluation as a factor in delusional belief

Max Coltheart, Martin Davies

2021Cognitive Neuropsychiatry27 citationsDOI

Abstract

Introduction In accounts of the two-factor theory of delusional belief, the second factor in this theory has been referred to only in the most general terms, as a failure in the processes of hypothesis evaluation, with no attempt to characterise those processes in any detail. Coltheart and Davies ([2021]. How unexpected observations lead to new beliefs: A Peircean pathway. Consciousness and Cognition, 87, 103037. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2020.103037) attempted such a characterisation, proposing a detailed eight-step model of how unexpected observations lead to new beliefs based on the concept of abductive inference as introduced by Charles Sanders Peirce.Methods In this paper, we apply that model to the explanation of various forms of delusional belief.Results We provide evidence that in cases of delusion there is a specific failure of the seventh step in our model: the step at which predictions from (delusional) hypotheses are considered in the light of relevant evidence.Conclusions In the two-factor theory of delusional belief, the second factor consists of a failure to reject hypotheses in the face of disconfirmatory evidence.

Topics & Concepts

DelusionPsychologyInferenceCognitionCognitive psychologyConsciousnessEpistemologyCognitive sciencePhilosophyPsychiatryNeurosciencePsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentEpistemology, Ethics, and MetaphysicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition