•  228
    Correlation vs. causality: How/why the mind-body problem is hard
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 7 (4): 54-61. 2000.
    The Mind/Body Problem is about causation not correlation. And its solution will require a mechanism in which the mental component somehow manages to play a causal role of its own, rather than just supervening superflously on other, nonmental components that look, for all the world, as if they can do the full causal job perfectly well without it. Correlations confirm that M does indeed "supervene" on B, but causality is needed to show how/why M is not supererogatory; and that's the hard part
  •  46
    We must distinguish between what can be described or interpreted as X and what really is X. Otherwise we are just doing hermeneutics. It won't do simply to declare that the thermostat turns on the furnace because it feels cold or that the chess-playing computer program makes a move because it thinks it should get its queen out early. In what does real feeling and thinking consist?
  •  593
    Distributed processes, distributed cognizers and collaborative cognition
    [Journal (Paginated)] (in Press) 13 (3): 01-514. 2005.
    Cognition is thinking; it feels like something to think, and only those who can feel can think. There are also things that thinkers can do. We know neither how thinkers can think nor how they are able do what they can do. We are waiting for cognitive science to discover how. Cognitive science does this by testing hypotheses about what processes can generate what doing (“know-how”) This is called the Turing Test. It cannot test whether a process can generate feeling, hence thinking -- only whethe…Read more
  •  254
    Distributed cognition: Cognizing, autonomy and the Turing test
    with Itiel E. Dror
    Pragmatics and Cognition 14 (2): 14. 2006.
    Some of the papers in this special issue distribute cognition between what is going on inside individual cognizers' heads and their outside worlds; others distribute cognition among different individual cognizers. Turing's criterion for cognition was individual, autonomous input/output capacity. It is not clear that distributed cognition could pass the Turing Test
  •  37
    Some of the features of animal and human categorical perception (CP) for color, pitch and speech are exhibited by neural net simulations of CP with one-dimensional inputs: When a backprop net is trained to discriminate and then categorize a set of stimuli, the second task is accomplished by "warping" the similarity space (compressing within-category distances and expanding between-category distances). This natural side-effect also occurs in humans and animals. Such CP categories, consisting of n…Read more
  •  187
      Computation is interpretable symbol manipulation. Symbols are objects that are manipulated on the basis of rules operating only on theirshapes, which are arbitrary in relation to what they can be interpreted as meaning. Even if one accepts the Church/Turing Thesis that computation is unique, universal and very near omnipotent, not everything is a computer, because not everything can be given a systematic interpretation; and certainly everything can''t be givenevery systematic interpretation. B…Read more
  •  67
    Artificial life can take two forms: synthetic and virtual. In principle, the materials and properties of synthetic living systems could differ radically from those of natural living systems yet still resemble them enough to be really alive if they are grounded in the relevant causal interactions with the real world. Virtual (purely computational) "living" systems, in contrast, are just ungrounded symbol systems that are systematically interpretable as if they were alive; in reality they are no m…Read more
  •  101
    Consciousness: An afterthought
    Cognition and Brain Theory 5 29-47. 1982.
    There are many possible approaches to the mind/brain problem. One of the most prominent, and perhaps the most practical, is to ignore it
  •  155
    Symbol grounding and the symbolic theft hypothesis
    with Angelo Cangelosi and Alberto Greco
    In Angelo Cangelosi & Domenico Parisi (eds.), Simulating the Evolution of Language, Springer Verlag. pp. 191--210. 2002.
    Scholars studying the origins and evolution of language are also interested in the general issue of the evolution of cognition. Language is not an isolated capability of the individual, but has intrinsic relationships with many other behavioral, cognitive, and social abilities. By understanding the mechanisms underlying the evolution of linguistic abilities, it is possible to understand the evolution of cognitive abilities. Cognitivism, one of the current approaches in psychology and cognitive s…Read more
  •  472
    Can a machine be conscious? How?
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 10 (4-5): 67-75. 2003.
    A "machine" is any causal physical system, hence we are machines, hence machines can be conscious. The question is: which kinds of machines can be conscious? Chances are that robots that can pass the Turing Test -- completely indistinguishable from us in their behavioral capacities -- can be conscious (i.e. feel), but we can never be sure (because of the "other-minds" problem). And we can never know HOW they have minds, because of the "mind/body" problem. We can only know how they pass the Turin…Read more
  •  33
    BBS Valedictory Editorial
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (1): 1-2. 2003.
  •  19
    Broca's area and language evolution
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4): 1-5. 2005.
    : Grodzinsky associates Broca's area with three kinds of deficit, relating to articulation, comprehension (involving trace deletion), and production (involving "tree priming"). Could these be special cases of one deficit? Evidence from research on language evolution suggests that they may all involve syllable structure or those aspects of syntax that evolved through exploiting the neural mechanisms underlying syllable structure
  •  47
    Against computational hermeneutics
    Social Epistemology 4 167-172. 1990.
    Critique of Computationalism as merely projecting hermeneutics (i.e., meaning originating from the mind of an external interpreter) onto otherwise intrinsically meaningless symbols.
  •  1
    [Book Chapter]
    . 1987.
  •  64
    Dalgaard's recent article [3] argues that the part of the Web that constitutes the scientific literature is composed of increasingly linked archives. He describes the move in the online communications of the scientific community towards an expanding zone of secondorder textuality, of an evolving network of texts commenting on, citing, classifying, abstracting, listing and revising other texts. In this respect, archives are becoming a network of texts rather than simply a classified collection of…Read more
  •  45
    Responses to 'computationalism'
    with 1Imre Balogh, Brian Beakley, Paul Churchland, Michael Gorman, David Mertz, H. H. Pattee, William Ramsey, John Ringen, Georg Schwarz, Brian Slator, Alan Strudler, and Charles Wallis
    Social Epistemology 4 (2). 1990.
  • Behavior and the selective role of the environment
    with A. C. Catania
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 7 473-724. 1984.
  •  18
    Codes, communication and cognition
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 42. 2019.
    Brette criticizes the notion of neural coding because it seems to entail that neural signals need to “decoded” by or for some receiver in the head. If that were so, then neural coding would indeed be homuncular, requiring an entity to decipher the code. But I think Brette's plea to think instead in terms of complex, interactive causal throughput is preaching to the converted. Turing has already shown the way. In any case, the metaphor of neural coding has little to do with the symbol grounding p…Read more