Dear Cambridge Philosophers of Science,

Please find Ruth Hibbert's abstract for her CamPoS talk 'Entangled 
Histories:  Enactivism, Representationalism, and Frederic Bartlett':


'The distributed cognition perspectives (embodied, embedded, enactive, 
and extended cognition) are not just a new invention, but have long 
histories in the cognitive sciences. This talk will particularly concern 
the historical origins of the framework variously known as enactive or 
enacted cognition, enactivism, or radical embodied cognitive science. 
The starting point is Anthony Chemero’s helpful schematic history of the 
framework, and the main contribution is the addition of extra complexity 
to his picture with particular reference to the work of psychologist 
Frederic Bartlett in the 1920s and 1930s. This extra complexity suggests 
that we might have to look in places we might never expect to uncover 
the roots of radical embodied cognition, and that its apparent kinship 
to the other distributed cognition frameworks could in fact be the 
result of a shared family tree. In the light of this, any convergent 
evidence from apparently disparate members of the distributed cognition 
family should not impress us too much.'


Sincerely,

Brian Pitts

-- 
J. Brian Pitts
Senior Research Associate
Faculty of Philosophy
University of Cambridge
[email protected]

Ph.D., Philosophy/History & Philosophy of Science, University of Notre 
Dame
Ph.D., Physics, University of Texas at Austin


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