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Understanding Representation in the Cognitive Sciences: Does Representation Need Reality?

✍ Scribed by Markus F. Peschl, Alexander Riegler (auth.), Alexander Riegler, Markus Peschl, Astrid von Stein (eds.)


Publisher
Springer US
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Leaves
298
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


urrently a paradigm shift is occurring in for the conventional understanding of represen- which the traditional view of the brain as tions. The paper also summarizes the rationale for C representing the "things of the world" is the selection of contributions to this volume, which challenged in several respects. The present volume will roughly proceed from relatively "realist" c- is placed at the edge of this transition. Based on the ceptions of representation to more "constructivist" 1997 conference "New Trends in Cognitive Sci- interpretations. The final chapter of discussions, ence" in Vienna, Austria, it tries to collect and in- taped during and at the end of the conference, p- grate evidence from various disciplines such as p- vides the reader with the possibility to reflect upon losophy of science, neuroscience, computational the different approaches and thus contributes to b- approaches, psychology, semiotics, evolutionary ter and more integrative understanding of their biology, social psychology etc. , to foster a new thoughts and ideas. understanding of representation. The subjective experience of an outside world This book has a truly interdisciplinary character. It seems to suggest a mapping process where environ- is presented in a form that is readily accessible to mental entities are projected into our mind via some professionals and students alike across the cognitive kind of transmission. While a profound critique of sciences such as neuroscience, computer science, this idea is nearly as old as philosophy, it has gained philosophy, psychology, and sociology.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages 1-8
Does Representation Need Reality?....Pages 9-17
Overview of Contributions....Pages 19-22
The Connectionist Route to Embodiment and Dynamicism....Pages 23-32
The Ontological Status of Representations....Pages 33-38
Empirical and Metaphysical Anti-Representationalism....Pages 39-47
Representation in Cognitive Neuroscience....Pages 49-56
Cognition without Representation?....Pages 57-74
On Computing Systems and Their Environment....Pages 75-81
Representation and Cognitive Explanation....Pages 83-91
When Coffee Cups Are Like Old Elephants, or Why Representation Modules Don’t Make Sense....Pages 93-100
The Recommendation Architecture: Relating Cognition to Physiology....Pages 101-113
Neurodynamics and the Revival of Associationism in Cognitive Science....Pages 115-119
The Dynamic Manifestation of Cognitive Structures in the Cerebral Cortex....Pages 121-126
Response Selectivity, Neuron Doctrine, and Mach’s Principle in Perception....Pages 127-134
Mental Representations: A Computational-Neuroscience Scheme....Pages 135-142
Sketchpads In and Beyond the Brain....Pages 143-146
Inductive Learning with External Representations....Pages 147-159
Does the Brain Represent the World? Evidence Against the Mapping Assumption....Pages 161-167
Perception Through Anticipation. A Behaviour-Based Approach to Visual Perception....Pages 169-176
Rethinking Grounding....Pages 177-190
Reality: A Prerequisite to Meaningful Representation....Pages 191-197
Explorations in Synthetic Pragmatics....Pages 199-208
Does Semantics Need Reality?....Pages 209-217
Empiricism and Social Reality: Can Cognitive Science Be Socialized?....Pages 219-227
Habitus and Animats....Pages 229-235
Processing Concepts and Scenarios: Electrophysiological Findings on Language Representation....Pages 237-245
Constructivist Consequences: Translation and Reality....Pages 247-252
The Observer in the Brain....Pages 253-256
Reality and Representation Qualia, Computers, and the β€œExplanatory Gap”....Pages 257-268
Can a Constructivist Distinguish between Experience and Representation?....Pages 269-276
How Animals Handle Reality- The Adaptive Aspect of Representation....Pages 277-281
Piaget’s Legacy: Cognition as Adaptive Activity....Pages 283-287
Back Matter....Pages 289-307

✦ Subjects


Neurology; Philosophy; Epistemology; Phenomenology; Artificial Intelligence (incl. Robotics)


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