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Representation in Cognitive Science

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dc.contributor.author Shea, Nicholas
dc.date.accessioned 2022-07-26T08:30:32Z
dc.date.available 2022-07-26T08:30:32Z
dc.date.issued 2018-10
dc.identifier.isbn 9780198812883
dc.identifier.uri http://111.93.204.14:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/708
dc.description.abstract The representational theory of mind (RTM) has given us the powerful insight that thinking consists of the processing of mental representations. Behaviour is the result of these cognitive processes and makes sense in the light of their contents. There is no widely accepted account of how representations get their content – of the metaphysics of representational content. That question, usually asked about representations at the personal level like beliefs and conscious states, is equally pressing for the subpersonal representations that pervade our best explanatory theories in cognitive science. This book argues that well-understood naturalistic resources can be combined to provide an account of subpersonal representational content. It shows how contents arise in a series of detailed case studies in cognitive science. The account is pluralistic, allowing that content is constituted differently in different cases. Building on insights from previous theories, especially teleosemantics, the accounts combine an appeal to correlational information and structural correspondence with an expanded notion of etiological function, which captures the kinds of stabilizing processes that give rise to content. The accounts support a distinction between descriptive and directive content. They also allow us to see how representational explanation gets its distinctive explanatory purchase. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Oxford University Press en_US
dc.subject Mental representation en_US
dc.subject Intentionality en_US
dc.subject Theories of content en_US
dc.subject Teleosemantics en_US
dc.subject Semantic information en_US
dc.subject RTM en_US
dc.subject Meaning en_US
dc.subject Naturalism en_US
dc.subject Exploitable relation en_US
dc.subject Structural correspondence en_US
dc.title Representation in Cognitive Science en_US
dc.type Book en_US


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