Joe Lau's wiki: Courses/2015a2230notes 1


What is cognitive science?

Readings


Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary science of mind and behaviour


Cognitive science is a young science with a long history

@Men ought to know that from the brain, and from the brain only, arise our pleasures, joys, laughter and jests, as well as our sorrows, pains, grievances, and tears. Through it...we...think, see, hear, and distinguish the ugly from the beautiful, the bad from the good, the pleasant from the unpleasant.^^^Hippocrates (400BC), Founder of Western medicine@

@By 1960 it was clear that something interdisciplinary was happening. At Harvard we called it cognitive studies, at Carnegie-Mellon they called in information-processing psychology, and at La Jolla they called it cognitive science.^^^George Miller@


The computer model of the mind

@by reasoning, I understand computation. And to compute is to collect the sum of many things added together at the same time, or to know the remainder when one thing has been taken from another. To reason therefore is the same as to add or to subtract.^^^Thomas Hobbes (1655) De Corpore ("On the Body") @

A main unifying theme in cognitive science is the use of computational explanations. Sometimes this is described as the computer model of the mind. The idea is that the best way to understand mind and behaviour is to explain them in terms of complex information processing carried out by a massively parallel neural network computer. But why?

Claim #1 - The distinctive feature of mental processes is that they involve complex information processing.

Claim #2 - Complex information processing is best explained by computations and representations.

Claim #3 - Those computations and representations that explain the mind are implemented by neural networks in the brain.

@I admit it would be easier for me to concede matter and extension to the soul, than the capacity of moving a body and of being moved, to an immaterial being.^^^Letter to Descartes from Elisabeth, Princess of Bohemia@


Philosophy and cognitive science

What does philosophy have to do with all this? Isn't cognitive science a science (and philosophy is not)?

@The aim of philosophy, abstractly formulated, is to understand how things in the broadest possible sense of the term hang together in the broadest possible sense of the term..^^^Wilfred Sellars "Philosophy and the scientific image of man"@

See Philosophy And Cognitive Science


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Page last modified on September 26, 2015, at 08:24 PM