“Understanding the Embodiment of Perception”

Brains regulars may know that Fred Adams and I have been trying to put up the good fight against extended cognition.  (Rob Rupert has been in there, too, of course.)  We now have five works on the topic “forthcoming.”  Our latest addition to this future literature is a paper of …

Cognitive Economy

Elisabetta Lalumera posted a comment with an interesting question:“What is cognitive economy?  Sometimes philosophers and psychologists evaluate proposals on the graounds that they fare well/bad at cognitive economy (e.g. on-the-fly concept views, like Barsalou’s, would avoid the storage cost of concepts in semantic memory, etc.).”“Any suggestion about what to look …

The Church-Turing Fallacy

The Church-Turing fallacy is the fallacy of supposing that the Church-Turing thesis (CT) or some other idea of Church and Turing entails that the mind can be explained computationally (i.e., computationalism).  (The term ‘Church-Turing fallacy’ is due to Jack Copeland.)IMHO, CT is one of the technical ideas most heavily abused by philosophers of mind.CT …

Imageless Thought

The standard story about the demise of introspectionist psychology goes something like this:  Towards the beginning of the 20th Century, experimental psychologists relied on introspecting subjects to study the mind.  Members of one prominent school believed that each thought is reducible to sensory images (visual, auditory including verbal, proprioceptive, etc.).  Among …

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