•  226
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    The role of representation in connectionist explanation of cognitive capacities
    In William Ramsey, Stephen P. Stich & D. M. Rumelhart (eds.), Philosophy and Connectionist Theory, Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 91--114. 1991.
  •  3
    Interpretational semantics
    In Stephen P. Stich & Ted A. Warfield (eds.), Mental Representation: A Reader, Blackwell. 1994.
    This is a condensed version of the material in chapters 8-10 in Meaning and Mental Representation (MIT, 1989). It is an explanation and defence of a theory of content for the mind considered as a symbolic computational process. It is a view i abandoned shortly thereafter when I abandoned symbolic computatioalism as a viable theory of cognition.
  •  246
    Reply to Millikan
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 60 (1): 113-128. 2000.
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    Cognitive evolutionary psychology without representational nativism
    with Denise D. Cummins and Pierre Poirier
    Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 15 (2): 143-159. 2003.
    A viable evolutionary cognitive psychology requires that specific cognitive capacities be (a) heritable and (b) ‘quasi-independent’ from other heritable traits. They must be heritable because there can be no selection for traits that are not. They must be quasi-independent from other heritable traits, since adaptive variations in a specific cognitive capacity could have no distinctive consequences for fitness if effecting those variations required widespread changes in other unrelated traits and cap…Read more