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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Representation and rationality : foundations of cognitive science

Kirsh, David January 1983 (has links)
In this essay I consider the foundations of a particular approach to cognitive science. There is a belief, among some, that cognitive research ought to proceed in two steps. In the first step, cognitive systems ought to be interpreted as rational beings, endowed with knowledge of their environments and motivated by goals and desires. Questions about the modularity of knowledge and about the sort of knowledge that is necessary or sufficient for a given competence are addressed at this stage. In the second step, inferences are to be made about the design of control systems that might instantiate these kinds of knowledge states, goals and rationality. Studies at the knowledge level are meant to serve as guidelines in the search for mechanisms. Problems arise as soon as one asks for the justification of this view. For instance, one often hears that knowledge is attributed by a process of interpretation that is subjective; it depends on the scientist having a 'manual' for interpreting behaviour that has no foundation in fact. Knowledge is essentially observer relative; it designates nothing intrinsic in a system. In Chapter Three I argue that this position is false. By introducing the notion of 'robustness 1 as the touchstone of realism I suggest that knowledge states are potentially as robust as any in science. Moreover realism about knowledge does not entail accepting what Fodor has called the Language of Thought hypothesis. We can reason about knowledge states in abstraction from the various ways knowledge can be implemented in a system. The language of thought is just one of many ways that knowledge can be used by a system. Hence there is no simple way to move from an account of what a system knows to how it uses or has access to that knowledge. In Chapter One I argue that the step from 'knowledge theories' to 'process theories' is more complicated than language of thought theorists suppose. In Chapter Two I discuss the basic methodology of research at the knowledge level. Any well-defined task imposes severe constraints on the way it can be accomplished. The discovery of these constraints and the consequences that flow from them is perhaps the central job of knowledge level research. I conclude the thesis with two chapters on the limitations of knowledge level research. Given that the more structured and rigid a task environment is, the more determinate the knowledge that is necessary or sufficient for task competence, we would expect that tasks and environments which are more open-ended, less closed to intervention from outside interference, would not submit to knowledge level research. Relying on a distinction between peripheral and central cognitive faculties, I question the prospects for knowledge level research of central faculties. Unlike the problem of vision or muscular co-ordination, the problem of deliberation is radically open-ended. Too many factors might become relevant to bound the class of task knowledge that might become vital.
2

Toward a foundation for interdisciplinary science : a model of special sciences and levels of complexity /

Overton, James Alexander, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Carleton University, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 125-126). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
3

Does the mind leak? : on Andy Clark's extended cognition hypothesis and its critics : a thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Philosophy /

Peters, Uwe. January 2009 (has links)
Theses (M.A.)--University of Canterbury, 2009. / Typescript (photocopy). Includes bibliographical references (leaves 98-103). Also available via the World Wide Web.
4

Non-referring concepts /

Scott, Sam, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Carleton University, 2003. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 195-207). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
5

Being and thinking in the social world : phenomenological illuminations of social cognition and human selfhood

Higgins, Joe January 2017 (has links)
At least since the time of Aristotle, it has been widely accepted that “man is by nature a social animal”. We eat, sleep, talk, laugh, cry, love, fight and create in ways that integrally depend on others and the social norms that we collectively generate and maintain. Yet in spite of the widely accepted importance of human sociality in underlying our daily activities, its exact manifestation and function is consistently overlooked by many academic disciplines. Cognitive science, for example, regularly neglects the manner in which social interactions and interactively generated norms canalise and constitute our cognitive processes. Without the inescapable ubiquity of dynamic social norms, any given agent simply could not cognise as a human. In this thesis, I aim to use a range of insights – from phenomenology, social psychology, neuroscience, cultural anthropology and gender studies – to clarify the role of sociality for human life. More specifically, the thesis can be broadly separated into three parts. I begin (chapters 1 and 2) with a broad explanation of how human agents are fundamentally tied to worldly entities and other agents in a way that characterises their ontological existence. In chapters 3 and 4, I criticise two recent and much-discussed theories of social cognition – namely, we-mode cognition and participatory sense-making – for failing to make intelligible the social constitution of human existence. In the later chapters (5-7), I then propose foundations for a more satisfactory theory of social cognition, as well as explicating a view of human selfhood as ‘biosocial', such that even the autonomy of biological bodies is socially codified from a human perspective. Taken together, the aforementioned chapters should contribute to calls for a new direction in social cognitive science, whilst also yielding novel insights into the nature of human selfhood.

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