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Pierre Steiner

Université de Technologie de Compiègne
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    44
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 More details
  • Université de Technologie de Compiègne
    Humanities and Technology
    Professor
Université de Provence
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2007
Email (login required)
Compiègne, Hauts-de-France, France
0000-0002-0041-5973
Areas of Specialization
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
20th Century Philosophy
General Philosophy of Science
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
Intentionality
Metaphysics of Mind
Epistemology of Mind
  • All publications (44)
  •  202
    The bounds of representation: A non-representationalist use of the resources of the model of extended cognition
    Pragmatics and Cognition 18 (2): 235-272. 2010.
    Based on an endorsement of the hypothesis of extended cognition , this paper proposes a criticism of the representationalist assumptions that still pertain to these contemporary models of cognition. I first rehearse some basic problems akin to any representationalist model of cognition, before proposing some more specific arguments directed against the necessity, the plausibility, and the coherence of the marriage between extended cognition and contemporary representationalism . Extended and dis…Read more
    Based on an endorsement of the hypothesis of extended cognition , this paper proposes a criticism of the representationalist assumptions that still pertain to these contemporary models of cognition. I first rehearse some basic problems akin to any representationalist model of cognition, before proposing some more specific arguments directed against the necessity, the plausibility, and the coherence of the marriage between extended cognition and contemporary representationalism . Extended and distributed models of cognition have the resources to get rid of representationalism, and they should better do it. Their adherence to representationalism might be an by-product of the extended character of the scientific study of cognition
    The Concept of RepresentationVarieties of RepresentationRepresentation in Cognitive ScienceMetaphysi…Read more
    The Concept of RepresentationVarieties of RepresentationRepresentation in Cognitive ScienceMetaphysics of Extended CognitionContinental Philosophy
  •  43
    Embodied Cognitive Science, Pragmatism, and the Fate of Mental Representation
    In Roman Madzia & Matthias Jung (eds.), Pragmatism and Embodied Cognitive Science: From Bodily Intersubjectivity to Symbolic Articulation, De Gruyter. pp. 73-98. 2016.
    Philosophy of Cognitive ScienceEmbodiment and Situated Cognition
  •  78
    Survenance, émergence et immersion. Le problème de la conscience d'un point de vue externaliste
    Revue Philosophique De Louvain 111 (1): 69-108. 2013.
    Qualia and MaterialismConcepts of EmergenceEmergence in Cognitive Science
  •  410
    Philosophie, technologie, cognition. Etat des lieux et perspectives
    Intellectica 53 7-40. 2010.
    Embodiment and Situated Cognition
  •  164
    Beyond the internalism/externalism debate: The constitution of the space of perception
    with Charles Lenay
    Consciousness and Cognition 19 (4): 938-952. 2010.
    This paper tackles the problem of the nature of the space of perception. Based both on philosophical arguments and on results obtained from original experimental situations, it attempts to show how space is constituted concretely, before any distinction between the “inner” and the “outer” can be made. It thus sheds light on the presuppositions of the well-known debate between internalism and externalism in the philosophy of mind; it argues in favor of the latter position, but with arguments that…Read more
    This paper tackles the problem of the nature of the space of perception. Based both on philosophical arguments and on results obtained from original experimental situations, it attempts to show how space is constituted concretely, before any distinction between the “inner” and the “outer” can be made. It thus sheds light on the presuppositions of the well-known debate between internalism and externalism in the philosophy of mind; it argues in favor of the latter position, but with arguments that are foundationally antecedent to this debate. We call the position we defend enactive externalism. It is based on experimental settings which, in virtue of their minimalism, make it possible both to defend a sensori-motor/enactive theory of perception; and, especially, to inquire into the origin of the space of perception, showing how it is concretely enacted before the controversy between internalism and externalism can even take place
    Science of ConsciousnessInternalism and Externalism about Experience
  •  160
    Boundless thought. The case of conceptual mental episodes
    Manuscrito 35 (2): 269-309. 2012.
    I present and defend here a thesis named vehicleless externalism for conceptual mental episodes. According to it, the constitutive relations there are between the production of conceptual mental episodes by an individual and the inclusion of this individual in social discursive practices make it non-necessary to equate, even partially, conceptual mental episodes with the occurrence of physical events inside of that individual. Conceptual mental episodes do not have subpersonal vehicles; they hav…Read more
    I present and defend here a thesis named vehicleless externalism for conceptual mental episodes. According to it, the constitutive relations there are between the production of conceptual mental episodes by an individual and the inclusion of this individual in social discursive practices make it non-necessary to equate, even partially, conceptual mental episodes with the occurrence of physical events inside of that individual. Conceptual mental episodes do not have subpersonal vehicles; they have owners: persons in interpretational practices. That thesis is grounded on inferentialism and on the endorsement of the idea that "meaning is normative". After having recapitulated this heritage and after having presented that thesis, the paper especially attempts to articulate how, in that framework, we may then positively conceive the relations there are between conceptual mental episodes, intracranial events and inferential behaviour.
    Nonreductive MaterialismAnomalous Monism and Mental CausationExternalism and Cognitive Science, MiscRead more
    Nonreductive MaterialismAnomalous Monism and Mental CausationExternalism and Cognitive Science, MiscInferential Theories of ConceptsThe Nature of Contents, Misc
  •  6
    The Many Faces of Experience
    Constructivist Foundations 11 (2): 395-397. 2016.
    Open peer commentary on the article “Going Beyond Theory: Constructivism and Empirical Phenomenology” by Urban Kordeš. Upshot: The priority Kordeš gives to empirical phenomenology in the empirical assessment and grounding of constructivism stems from a restrictive conception of experience that has been questioned by other proponents of what he calls the “phenomenological attitude.”
    Philosophy of Cognitive ScienceAspects of Consciousness
  •  598
    Interaction et transaction
    Chromatikon 6 203-213. 2010.
  •  102
    The nature of the modern mind. Some remarks on Dewey's "Unmodern philosophy and modern philosophy"
    European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 5 (1). 2013.
    In Unmodern Philosophy and Modern Philosophy, Dewey develops a comprehensive account of mindedness and a genealogical picture of the modern concept of ‘mind.’ Chapter X, “Mind and Body”, is the longest chapter of the book. Its three sections correspond to three different folders, yet all written in 1942. The title of the chapter – Dewey’s own title – might sound surprising to the readers of chapter VII of Experience and Nature, where Dewey explicitly coined the term ‘body-min...
    Epistemological Theories, MiscMetaphysics of Mind, Misc20th Century Analytic Philosophy, MiscPhiloso…Read more
    Epistemological Theories, MiscMetaphysics of Mind, Misc20th Century Analytic Philosophy, MiscPhilosophy, General WorksJohn Dewey
  •  131
    Quel Arrière-plan pour l’esprit?
    Dialogue 45 (3): 419-444. 2006.
    RÉSUMÉ: J’analyse dans cet article la notion d’Arrière-plan teile qu’elle a été développée par John Searle en philosophie de I’esprit depuis une vingtaine d’années. Cette notion désigne, largement, I’ensemble des capacités mentales non-représentationnelles au moyen desquelles les représentations mentales peuvent avoir un contenu sémantique déterminé et être appliquées. Je tente de montrer que, bienqu’originale et pertinente, cette notion, telle qu’elle est caractérisée par Searle, est tout à fai…Read more
    RÉSUMÉ: J’analyse dans cet article la notion d’Arrière-plan teile qu’elle a été développée par John Searle en philosophie de I’esprit depuis une vingtaine d’années. Cette notion désigne, largement, I’ensemble des capacités mentales non-représentationnelles au moyen desquelles les représentations mentales peuvent avoir un contenu sémantique déterminé et être appliquées. Je tente de montrer que, bienqu’originale et pertinente, cette notion, telle qu’elle est caractérisée par Searle, est tout à fait insuffisante pour remplir ses desseins descriptifs et explicatifs. Je m’efforce alors de penser I’Arrière-plan dans une perspective externaliste et à partir d’un point de vue (minimalement) représentationnaliste.ABSTRACT: This article analyzes the notion ofbackground capacities as developed by John Searle during the last twenty years in philosophy of mind. Broadly construed, this notion designates non-representational mental capacities as the means by which mental representations are given a precise semantic content and thus are able to be expressed. Though novel and relevant, I intend to show that, according to Searle’s description, this notion proves inadequate to attain its descriptive and explicative goals. I go on to regard background capacities in aperspective both externalist and (minimally) representationalist.
    European Philosophy
  •  130
    Délocaliser les phénomènes mentaux: la philosophie de l'esprit de Dewey
    Revue Internationale de Philosophie 245 (3): 273-292. 2008.
    John Dewey
  •  138
    C.S. Peirce and artificial intelligence: historical heritage and (new) theoretical stakes
    SAPERE - Special Issue on Philosophy and Theory of AI 5 265-276. 2013.
    Philosophy of AI, General WorksCharles Sanders PeirceMachine Functionalism
  •  101
    William M. Ramsey, Representation Reconsidered, Cambridge (GB)/New York, Cambridge University Press, 2007, 268 pagesWilliam M. Ramsey, Representation Reconsidered, Cambridge (GB)/New York, Cambridge University Press, 2007, 268 pages (review)
    Philosophiques 35 (2): 616-620. 2008.
  •  17
    Mental Explicitness
    Abstracta 3 (1): 2-22. 2006.
    This paper aims at answering the question “When is informational content explicitly represented in a cognitive system?”. I first distinguish the explicitness this question is about from other kinds of explicitness that are currently investigated in philosophy of mind, and situate the components of the question within the various conceptual frameworks that are used to study mental representations. I then present and criticize, on conceptual and empirical grounds, two basic ways of answering the q…Read more
    This paper aims at answering the question “When is informational content explicitly represented in a cognitive system?”. I first distinguish the explicitness this question is about from other kinds of explicitness that are currently investigated in philosophy of mind, and situate the components of the question within the various conceptual frameworks that are used to study mental representations. I then present and criticize, on conceptual and empirical grounds, two basic ways of answering the question, the first one coming from the classical computational theory of mind, the latter one issued from a procedural conception of informational contents. I then argue for a new answer to the initial question, an answer that retains some valuable insights of the criticized theories, but which underlines the importance and the interpretational source of the distinctiveness proper to explicitly represented contents
    Intentionality
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