Literature DB >> 22684735

To naturalize or not to naturalize? An issue for cognitive science as well as anthropology.

Keith Stenning1.   

Abstract

Several of Beller, Bender, and Medin's (2012) issues are as relevant within cognitive science as between it and anthropology. Knowledge-rich human mental processes impose hermeneutic tasks, both on subjects and researchers. Psychology's current philosophy of science is ill suited to analyzing these: Its demand for ''stimulus control'' needs to give way to ''negotiation of mutual interpretation.'' Cognitive science has ways to address these issues, as does anthropology. An example from my own work is about how defeasible logics are mathematical models of some aspects of simple hermeneutic processes. They explain processing relative to databases of knowledge and belief-that is, content. A specific example is syllogistic reasoning, which raises issues of experimenters' interpretations of subjects' reasoning. Science, especially since the advent of understandings of computation, does not have to be reductive. How does this approach transfer onto anthropological topics? Recent cognitive science approaches to anthropological topics have taken a reductive stance in terms of modules. We end with some speculations about a different cognitive approach to, for example, religion.
Copyright © 2012 Cognitive Science Society, Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22684735     DOI: 10.1111/j.1756-8765.2012.01200.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Top Cogn Sci        ISSN: 1756-8757


  2 in total

1.  Cognition is … Fundamentally Cultural.

Authors:  Andrea Bender; Sieghard Beller
Journal:  Behav Sci (Basel)       Date:  2013-01-04

2.  Causal inferences about others' behavior among the Wampar, Papua New Guinea - and why they are hard to elicit.

Authors:  Bettina Beer; Andrea Bender
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-03-10
  2 in total

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