Cognitive Institutions and Non-Referring Content

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Issue Date
2017-12-02
Language
en
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Abstract
There are a problematic set of beliefs for the Extended Mind Hypothesis which operate on non-referring content. Mental states operating on ostensive informational sources are intuitively more available for extended mind theories. the difficulty arises in accounting for kinds which are non-referring. Despite the explicit lack of extension, these types of content are not internalist argumentative tools but are rather good cases for Socially Extended Mind. Therefore, I will demonstrate the role which enculturation,social practice, and tradition play in individuating mental content. Here-in, the role that culture-as-institution plays in cognition is brought to force. It is the principled social distribution of cognition which allow for these forms and any appeal to non-derived content will not adequately address the fundamental components of non-referring, content-full cognitive states.
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Faculteit der Filosofie, Theologie en Religiewetenschappen
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