The CEU Department of Cognitive Science and the Social Mind Center cordially invites you
to its talk by
Louise Barrett<http://directory.uleth.ca/users/louise.barrett> (University of
Lethbridge, Psychology Department)
Date: Tuesday, April 3, 2018 - 17:00-18:30
Location: Department of Cognitive Science, CEU, Oktober 6 St. 7, room 101
A Little Less Representation, a Little More Action, Please
In psychology and cognitive neuroscience, the job description of the brain is to represent
the external world, compensating for a lack of specificity in sensory input. While it is
true that humans are representational creatures, this view is not ‘species-neutral’ in the
way we sometimes assume, and it may not be appropriate to apply this model broadly across
the animal kingdom; it gets evolutionary continuity precisely backwards. It also generates
a particular kind of “scientific” (or even, scientistic) mind that is contrasted with a
form of “mindless behaviourism” and then treats these as if they are the only two
alternatives possible; an investigative strategy prominent in studies of comparative
cognition. In recent years, there have been efforts to change the job description of the
brain to one that is “performative”, rather than representational. These views—variously
characterised as embodied, embedded, enactive and extended—consider the brain as part of a
dynamical system in which brain, body and environment together generate psychological
phenomena. Thus, they reject the idea that of a brain sits aloof from the senses, waiting
to receive data on which it can put its inferential capacities to work. Here, I discuss
how these ideas allow us to do justice to evolutionary continuity, but don’t require other
creatures to be hairier, more feathery, less talkative versions of ourselves. This in turn
has implications for how we think about our own evolution, and what we talk about when we
talk about “minds”. I wish to make a case for thinking of behaviours as “expressive
enactions”, where behaviour are criteria for appropriate psychological attributions, not
inductive evidence for them.
We are looking forward to see you at the talk!
Cognitive Science Events at CEU:
http://cognitivescience.ceu.hu/events
Social Mind Center Events at CEU:
http://socialmind.ceu.edu/events
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