Cognitive Science of Philosophy Symposium: Neuroaesthetics

Welcome to the Brains Blog’s Symposium series on the Cognitive Science of Philosophy. The aim of the series is to examine the use of diverse methods to generate philosophical insight. Each symposium is comprised of two parts. In the target post, a practitioner describes the method under discussion and explains …

Apply Now: Summer Institute in Moral Psychology at Cornell!

Cornell University will host an NEH Summer Institute in Moral Psychology, June 24-July 19, 2024, with lead instructors Laura Niemi, Shaun Nichols, and John Doris, and a slate of distinguished guest instructors. Applications are due March 5, 2024. More information here: Moral Psychology @ Cornell – NEH Summer Institute 2024

The 2024 Webinar Series for Neural Mechanisms Online

Check out our partner’s line-up of speakers. Nick Shea presented last week, and there are a dozen total sessions below. You can preview the list of names below and find more information (and subscribe to the newsletter with webinar reminders) at neuralmechanisms.org/webinarseries2024.html. 26 January, 16-18 CETNick Shea(London) 9 February, 16-18 …

Representation Crisis: Commentary on “Investigating the concept of representation in the neural and psychological sciences”

Inês Hipólito Macquarie University, Philosophy Department In cognitive science, the notion of mental representation, stands as a central beacon, not due to unanimous agreement, but rather because it serves as the conceptual nexus through which diverse theoretical trajectories can be mapped out in their understanding of cognitive behaviour.  Cognitive psychology, …

Reply to Ben Baker

Luis H. Favela and Edouard Machery We thank Ben Baker for taking the time to offer his assessment of our project as well as some suggestions. Baker kindly notes the novelty of the project, its experimental design, and contribution to the debate about representations. He reports however being “somewhat put …

Commentary on Favela and Machery, “Investigating the concept of representation in the neural and psychological sciences”

Ben Baker I admit I was somewhat put off by the first two sentences of Favela and Machery’s paper. It feels odd to use “mainstream___ism” to label merely the wide application of a concept – or even just use of the word “representation” – when we are not sure about …

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