Cambridge University Press, 2011. — 540 p.
The theme of this book is that human beings possess cognitive processes that enable them to override the imperatives of past experience and to act and think in novel ways, and that these processes differ from the types of cognitive processes usually envisioned in psychological theories of learning. The capability for what I call deep learning – or, more precisely, non-monotonic cognitive change – constitutes a distinct aspect of mind that follows its own laws and hence requires its own theory. The book develops this theme by summarizing and extending prior research by me and others with respect to three specific types of non-monotonic change: the creation of novelty; the adaptation of cognitive skills to changing circumstance; and the conversion from one belief to another, incompatible belief. The book offers novel theories of the mental processes operating in each of these three types of cognitive change, as well as a unified theory that captures the abstract principles that they share.