How Cognitive Science treats the mind and consciousness of self

http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/kant-mind/#2.4  

"the dominant model of the mind in contemporary cognitive science is Kantian," 

"Kant's conception of the mind is functionalist"

"to Kant, the two most important function of the mind are

a) synthesis (see below in 2).
 
b) unity associated with this synthesis "

"Thus, in Kant's thought about the mind early in CPR, 
there is not one central movement but two, one [synthesis] in the 
Transcendental Aesthetic and the other [unification] in the Metaphysical 
Deduction 
[sorting the Transcendental Aesthetic into the categories of experience] 
experience (of objects) to the necessary conditions of such experience[the 
categories]. 

The second is a move down from the Aristotelian forms of judgment to the 
concepts that we have to use in judging, namely, the Categories. One is 
inference 
up from experience, the other deduction down from conceptual 
structures of the most abstract kind."

" some of Kant's most characteristic doctrines about the mind are now
built into the very foundations of cognitive science."
But only some. 

"Three ideas define the basic shape (‘cognitive architecture’) of Kant's model 
and 
one its dominant method. They have all become part of the foundation of 
cognitive science. 

    1)The mind is complex set of abilities (functions). (As Meerbote 1989 and 
many others have observed, 
    Kant held a functionalist view of the mind almost 200 years before 
functionalism was officially 
    articulated in the 1960s by Hilary Putnam and others.) 

    2) The functions crucial for mental, knowledge-generating activity are 

        a) spatio-temporal processing [into spacetime] of
        b) application of concepts to, sensory inputs. 

    Cognition
     requires concepts as well as percepts.  These functions are forms of what 
Kant called 
    synthesis. Synthesis (and the unity in consciousness required for 
synthesis) are 
    central to cognition. 

    These three ideas are fundamental to most thinking about cognition now. 
    Kant's most important method, the transcendental method [structuring the 
mind with basic categories],
    is also at the heart of contemporary cognitive science. 

To study the mind, infer the conditions necessary for experience [the 
transcendental deduction]. 
Arguments having this structure are called transcendental arguments. 

Translated into contemporary terms, the core of this method is inference to the 
best explanation, 
the method of postulating unobservable mental mechanisms in order to explain 
observed behaviour. 

To be sure, Kant thought that he could get more out of his transcendental 
arguments 
    than just ‘best explanations’. He thought that he could get a priori 
(experience independent) 
knowledge out of them. Kant had a tripartite doctrine of the a priori. He held 
that some features 
of the mind and its knowledge had a priori origins, i.e., must be in the mind 
prior to experience 
(because using them is necessary to have experience). That mind and knowledge 
have these 
features are a priori truths, i.e., necessary and universal (B3/4)[1]. 
    And we can come to know these truths, or that they are a priori at any 
rate, only 
by using a priori methods, i.e., we cannot learn these things from experience 
(B3) (Brook 1993). Kant thought that transcendental 
arguments were a priori or yielded the a priori in all three ways. 
Nonetheless, at the heart of this method is inference to the best explanation. 
When introspection fell out of favour about 100 years ago, the alternative 
approach 
adopted was exactly this approach. Its nonempirical roots in Kant 
notwithstanding, 
it is now the major method used by experimental cognitive scientists."

Roger Clough, rclo...@verizon.net 
10/24/2012  
"Forever is a long time, especially near the end." -Woody Allen

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Everything List" group.
To post to this group, send email to everything-list@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
everything-list+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list?hl=en.

Reply via email to