Authors
Sabrina Golonka, Andrew D Wilson
Publication date
2019/7/3
Journal
Ecological Psychology
Volume
31
Issue
3
Pages
235-253
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Representations feature heavily in cognitive science theories about our behavioral repertoire. Their critical feature is its ability to designate (stand in for) spatially or temporally distant properties, so that organizing our behavior with respect to mental/neural representations means organizing our behavior with respect to the otherwise unavailable property they designate. Representations are a powerful tool, but serious problems (grounding, system-detectable error) remain unsolved. Ecological explanations reject representations. However, this has left us without a straightforward vocabulary to engage with “representation-hungry” problems involving spatial or temporal distance, nor the role of the nervous system in cognition. To develop such a vocabulary, here we show that ecological information functions to designate the ecologically scaled dynamical world to an organism. We then show that this designation …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Golonka, AD Wilson - Ecological Psychology, 2019