Matthew Inglis
@mjinglis.bsky.social
220 followers 67 following 37 posts
Academic at Loughborough University
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mjinglis.bsky.social
I’m looking for a study where someone has looked at accuracy on Raven’s matrices (or similar) items under extreme time pressure at the item level (not time pressure at the test level). I can’t find anything, but surely this study must exist?
mjinglis.bsky.social
Most importantly, I strongly disagree with Bill's apparent view that experimental work in philosophy should avoid testing competing theories and instead stick to "unproblematic common ground" with minimal "theoretical baggage". How could you make theoretical progress with such a view?
mjinglis.bsky.social
This wasn't a "curious methodological choice" which supported a non-ontic picture "only by accident". It was a deliberate attempt to empirically test a prediction made by non-ontic Zelcer-like accounts. I don't see where the "confounded results" or "muddled interpretations" are.
mjinglis.bsky.social
4. They didn’t, therefore participants couldn’t have only used ontic criteria when making their judgements.
mjinglis.bsky.social
3. If they had only used ontic criteria, the two purported explanations would have ended up with similar CJ parameters.
mjinglis.bsky.social
2. We asked mathematicians to make ontic explanations about two 'identical' proofs (same underlying argument, different presentation).
mjinglis.bsky.social
1. Some people (e.g., Mark Zelcer) believe that ontic explanations don’t exist in mathematics. If they're right, then when you ask mathematicians to make judgements about the ontic notion of explanation, they will actually make judgements about the epistemic notion.
mjinglis.bsky.social
I'm very puzzled by this criticism. The logic of this methodological choice was the following.
mjinglis.bsky.social
Bill goes on to suggest that "experimentalists ought to avoid designing studies around controversial ideology" and that they should stick to "unproblematic common ground".
mjinglis.bsky.social
In a section entitled "Experiment and Ideology", Bill suggests that our decision to prompt participants to think about explanation onticly (roughly, in a manner independent of how a reader might react to the purported explanation) was a "curious methodological choice" which "courted confusion".
mjinglis.bsky.social
Very niche thread, apologies!

I want to reply to a criticism made in this preprint by Bill D'Alessandro (who I think isn't on bluesky?). philpapers.org/archive/DALT...
philpapers.org
mjinglis.bsky.social
Attacked by the Charnwood Borough Council mace at today’s graduation ceremony.
Reposted by Matthew Inglis
lborodme.bsky.social
Can your fear of maths shape your child's future?

New research from @lborouniversity.bsky.social & University of Bologna finds link b/ween parents’ maths anxiety & lower achievement in children.

Read Kinga & Carlo's @theconversation.com article on our blog today:

blog.lboro.ac.uk/cmc/2025/06/...
Parents’ fear of maths linked to lower achievement in children – new research – Centre for Mathematical Cognition
tinyurl.com
mjinglis.bsky.social
This is a great summary of a very peculiar interaction. I wonder how Geraint Rees is coping with the new OfS duty that requires him and his UCL colleagues to “support constructive dialogue on contentious subjects”.
mjinglis.bsky.social
Fully-funded PhD studentship to work on children’s financial literacy. Deadline end of June. https://ufncollaboratory.ac.uk/childrens-financial-literacy/
mjinglis.bsky.social
I wrote a blogpost about how the REF may have influenced how British academics write papers.
bethwoollacott.bsky.social
New @lborodme.bsky.social blogpost today! @mjinglis.bsky.social reviews his work looking at the REF and its definition of research quality:

Has the research excellence framework changed how we write papers? The case of mathematics education.

Read below:
blog.lboro.ac.uk/cmc/2025/02/...
Has the Research Excellence Framework changed how we write papers? The case of mathematics education – Centre for Mathematical Cognition
blog.lboro.ac.uk
mjinglis.bsky.social
Evidence of @driro.bsky.social’s photography skills on show at Megan Foulkes’s PhD viva celebrations.
mjinglis.bsky.social
That’s more than Jimmy Dickinson.
pn-neil-allen.bsky.social
Forgive the self-indulgence, but tonight marks my 1,000th #Pompey game for The News. It began at West Brom in February 2001 - and since then plenty of are-you-watching-the-same-game player ratings and match reports. My apologies. I might get the hang of it one day…
mjinglis.bsky.social
“Stewart Highmore Pearce (1818-1851) went to sea and married imprudently. He is probably the child whose head is painted out and replaced by a bible in the picture which used to hang in the front hall at West Stoke House.”
mjinglis.bsky.social
“George Pearce (b 1794) was a ship-broker at Lloyd’s. He was twice married. His second wife, Mrs Dipnall, squinted but was a good woman.”
mjinglis.bsky.social
“Little is known of Charles Woodman Eastwood (1829-1867) who went to Australia under a cloud, it is said. His daughter, Jeannie, returned to England and died here. Her circumstances are not known but she was something of a poor relation. She was also rather simple, sickly and godly.”