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On wings of knowledge: a review of Allen Newell's Unified Theories of Cognition

โœ Scribed by Jordan B. Pollack


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
837 KB
Volume
59
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3702

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๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


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The time for unification in cognitive science has arrived, but who should lead the charge? The immunologist-turned-neuroscientist Gerald Edelman [6] thinks that neuroscientists should lead--or more precisely that he should (he seems to have a low opinion of everyone else in cognitive science). Someo

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Cognitive sciences, as defined by its practitioners, seeks to understand a variety of "higher" brain functions, examples of which are thinking, memory, perception, and language. The purpose of Newell's book, based on the William James Lectures he delivered at Harvard in 1987, is to bring together th

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Twenty years ago, Allen Newell and Herbert Simon gave us a landmark book, Human Problem Solving, in which they introduced the method of protocol analysis, reported the parameters of human cognition, and set the stage for the emerging field of cognitive science. It is only fitting that, with his new