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Supersizing the Mind [¾çÀå]

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Foreword
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Brainbound Versus Extended
From Embodiment to Cognitive Extension
The Active Body
A Walk on the Wild Side
Inhabited Interaction
Active Sensing
Distributed Functional Decomposition
Sensing for Coupling
Information Self-Structuring
Perception, Qualia, and Sensorimotor Expectations
Time and Mind
Dynamics and (Soft) Computation
Out from the Bedrock
The Negotiable Body
Where the Rubber Meets the Road
What's in an Interface?
New Systemic Wholes
Substitutes
Incorporation Vs Use
Towards Cognitive Extension
Three Grades of Embodiment
Material Symbols
Language as Scaffolding
Augmenting Reality
Sculpting Attention
Hybrid Thoughts?
From Translation to Coordination
Second-order Cognitive Dynamics
Self-made Minds
World, Incorporated
Cognitive Niche Construction: A Primer
Cognition in the Globe: A Cameo
Thinking Space
Epistemic Engineers
Exploitative Representation and Wide Computation
Tetris: The Update
The Swirl of Organization
Extending the Mind
Brainbound versus Extended: The Case So Far
Boundary Disputes
Mind Re-bound?
Extended Anxiety
Pencil Me In
The Odd Coupling
Cognitive Candidacy
The Mark of the Cognitive?
Kinds and Minds
Perception and Development
Deception and Contested Space
Folk Intuition and Cognitive Extension
Asymmetry and Lopsideness
Similarity vs Complementarity
Hippo-World
The Cure for Cognitive Hiccups (HEMC, HEC, HEMC…)
Rupert's Challenge
HEC versus HEMC
Parity and Cognitive Kinds (Again)
The Persisting Core
Cognitive Impartiality
A Brain Teaser
Thoughtful Gestures
Material Carriers
Loops as Mechanisms
Anarchic Self-Stimulation
Autonomous Coupling
Why the HEC?
The Cure
Rediscovering the Brain
Matter into Mind
Honey, I Shrunk the Representations
Change Spotting: The Sequel
Thinking about Thinking: The Brain's Eye View
Born-Again Cartesians?
Surrogate Situations
Plug Points
Brain Control
Asymmetry Arguments
Extended in a Vat
The (Situated) Cognizer's Innards
The Limits of Embodiment
Painting, Planning, and Perceiving
Enacting Perceptual Experience
The Painter and the Perceiver
Three Virtues of the Strong Sensorimotor Model
A Vice: Sensorimotor (Hyper) Sensitivity
What Reaching Teaches
(Tweaked)Tele-Assistance
Sensorimotor Summarizing
Virtual Content, Again
Beyond the Sensorimotor Frontier
Disentangling Embodiment
Three Threads
The Separability Thesis
Beyond Flesh-eating Functionalism
Ada, Adder, and Odder
A Tension Revealed
What Bodies Are
Participant Machinery and Morphological Computation
Quantifying Embodiment
The Heideggerian Theatre
Conclusions: Mindsized BitesAndy
Appendix: The Extended Mind
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved.

Ã¥¼Ò°³

Studies of mind, thought and reason have tended to marginalize the role of bodily form, real-world action, and environmental backdrop. In recent years, both in philosophy and cognitive science, this tendency has been identified and, increasingly, resisted. The result is a plethora of work onwhat has become known as embodied, situated, distributed, and even 'extended' cognition. Work in this new, loosely knit field depicts thought and reason as in some way inextricably tied to the details of our gross bodily form, our habits of action and intervention, and the enabling web of social,cultural, and technological scaffolding in which we live, move, learn, and think. But exactly what kind of link is at issue? And what difference might such a link or links make to our best philosophical, psychological, and computational models of thought and reason? These are among the largeunsolved problems in this increasingly popular field. Drawing upon recent work in psychology, linguistics, neuroscience, artificial intelligence, robotics, human-computer systems, and beyond, Supersizing the Mind offers both a tour of the emerging landscape, and a sustained argument in favor of one approach to the key issues. That approach combinesthe use of representational, computational, and information-theoretic tools with an appreciation of the importance of context, timing, biomechanics, and dynamics. More controversially, it depicts some coalitions of biological and non-biological resources as the extended cognitive circuitry ofindividual minds. With a substantial foreword by David Chalmers, Supersizing the Mind is essential reading for all those interested in embodied cognition, the extended mind, and the likely shape of twenty-first century cognitive scientific explanation.

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