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Kelly Inglis Office: Philosophy Dept. 306 Office hours: by appointment

PHIL 2230 Philosophy and Cognitive Science. Kelly Inglis Office: Philosophy Dept. 306 Office hours: by appointment Email: kellyinglis@yahoo.com. About the course. Tuesdays 4 :00 -5:50, Room LE3 For schedule, readings, announcements, etc., see course blog: kellyinglis.wordpress.com.

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Kelly Inglis Office: Philosophy Dept. 306 Office hours: by appointment

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  1. PHIL 2230 Philosophy and Cognitive Science Kelly Inglis Office: Philosophy Dept. 306 Office hours: by appointment Email: kellyinglis@yahoo.com

  2. About the course Tuesdays 4:00-5:50, Room LE3 For schedule, readings, announcements, etc., see course blog: kellyinglis.wordpress.com

  3. Assessment 25% Midterm quiz (October 9th) 25% Short paper: 500-750 words on assigned topic 40% Longer paper 1500-2000 words 10% Tutorial participation

  4. Tutorials 4 groups, 10 students each Each tutorial group meets 4 times. Sign up sheets will be provided next week. Provisionally, Tuesday 1-1:50 and 2-2:50 If you can’t make these times, please see me after class today or send me an email. Very important!!

  5. Readings No course textbook. All required readings will be posted on the course blog. Some are available online, some will be on reserve at the main library. Some readings are required. Some are optional. “Required” means that you must read them! Readings for today: 1) “They’re made of meat” by Terry Bisson home.earthlink.net/~paulrack/id82.html 2) “What’s philosophy got to do with it?” by Tim van Gelder www.philosophy.unimelb.edu.au/tgelder/papers/WhatsPhilosophy.html

  6. Topics for today • What is cognitive science? • What is the role of philosophy in cognitive science? • The mind-body problem

  7. What is Cognitive Science? Cognitive science is the scientific study of the mind. How does the mind work? How does the brain produce intelligence?

  8. Cognitive science is an on-going project • Started in 1950s • The term “cognitive science” was coined in 1973 • Still at early stage of development

  9. Cognitive science is a science • A central principle is that the mind can be understood scientifically • A materialist approach

  10. Cognitive science is interdisciplinary Draws on: • psychology • neuroscience • computer science • anthropology • linguistics • philosophy.

  11. The six blind men and the elephant We are the blind men. The mind is the elephant.

  12. Contributions of different disciplines: • Psychology and linguistics • study human behavior, how people act, how people talk, what people say about their own mental experiences. Learn the output of the mind. • Neuroscience: • study the brain directly. See how the brain is organized, see the brain in action (on MRI scans), experiment on animal brains, study effects of brain damage.

  13. Computer science: • Model functions of the brain in computer programs. Learn how the brain might accomplish these functions. • Anthropology: • Learn how the brain evolved. Learn how thinking differs in different cultures. Learn what thinking processes remain the same in all cultures. • Philosophy: • Putting it all together

  14. Themes of cognitive science • What are mental states? How do they correspond to brain states? • How do mental representations acquire meaning? • Are many of our concepts and mental abilities innate, or are they all acquired through experience? • Is human thought conducted through a language-like code (possibly innate) such as can be modeled in a traditional computer program, or is thinking conducted through a connectionist architecture?

  15. Themes of cognitive science (cont.) • Is “folk psychology” an accurate reflection of what is going on in our heads? Or is it a highly-distorted simplification? • What is consciousness? What is the function of consciousness? • What is the relation between unconscious brain activities and conscious mental functions? • Do we have free will? Or are all our actions merely results of the mechanical operation of physical laws?

  16. The Role of Philosophyin Cognitive Science Philosophy is sometimes dismissed as obscure, meaningless and trivial. How can such an abstract unworldly discipline contribute to a serious scientific quest to understand the mind? What is philosophy? • Analysis • Conceptual clarification • Asking questions

  17. What do philosophers do for cognitive science? • Analyze and evaluate the arguments of others, often showing up flaws in another cognitive scientist’s reasoning • Clear up conceptual confusions, often showing that different researchers have different meanings in mind when using the same word (e.g. consciousness). • Ask questions, often pointing researchers towards new directions • Propose theories that are not (yet) empirically sound, often spurring researchers to do the empirical studies that can prove them right or wrong.

  18. In “What’s philosophy got to do with it?”, Tim van Gelder lists several roles a philosopher can play in regards to cognitive science: • The Pioneer Historically: • Science started as philosophy • Materialism, the basis for cognitive science • Philosophy of mind, the original cognitive science • Many specific cognitive science theories invented first by philosophers: • thought is a form of symbolic computation • there is a language of thought • the mind is modular

  19. The Pioneer (cont.) Currently: • The nature of consciousness • How the brain creates meaning • Do we have free will? 2) The Building Inspector Questioning the foundations of scientific enquiry. Are the assumptions well-grounded? Are there other, as-yet-unimagined ways for things to be? E.g. theory of relativity

  20. 3) The Zen Monk Provides society with the assurance that someone is thinking about deep, important problems (such as the meaning of life), even though the results of this deep thought may have no practical benefits to anyone. 4) The Cartographer The philosopher is able to peruse data and theories from the various interconnected disciplines of cognitive science and help put it all together, drawing up a map of what we understand of the mind and how it relates together, and also placing the current state of knowledge in a historical context.

  21. 5) The Dilettante Knowing something, but necessarily not everything, from all of the different disciplines and perspectives available. 6) The Archivist Following the progress of different disciplines from a broad historical perspective.

  22. The Cheerleader Seeking out significant theories and lines of research and bestowing official philosophical approval on them, thus bolstering certain fledging new approaches to modeling or understand the mind. The Gadfly Promoting startling new theories or attacking established ideas in order to stir up debate and spur cognitive scientists on to either defend their own theories or consider new possibilities.

  23. The Mind-Body Problem How can the brain think? Two possibilities: • Dualism • Materialism

  24. Dualism Two types of stuff or properties of stuff: physical and mental Kinds of dualism: • Substance dualism • Descartes: “I am a thinking thing” • 2 kinds of stuff: physical stuff and mind/soul stuff • Mind stuff: immaterial, no physical properties, not detectable by physical means

  25. Kinds of dualism (cont.) 2) Property dualism • There is one kind of stuff, but some stuff has two kinds of properties: mental properties and physical properties. • Mental properties are undetectable by science and do not follow physical laws

  26. Problems with dualism • What is non-physical stuff? • How does mind stuff interact with physical stuff? • The physical affects the mental; does the mental affect the physical?

  27. Problems with dualism (cont.) • The physical world is causally closed (conservation of energy) • The problem of epiphenomenalism • Ockham’s razor. Why posit mind stuff? • “Mind stuff” adds nothing to an explanation of the mind

  28. Materialism Everything is physical. The mind is composed of atoms, particles and forces. We are composed of stardust. The only difference is organization.

  29. Kinds of materialism 1) Identity theory: every mental state is identical to a particular physical state A problem with identity theory: alien minds 2) Supervenience: The mental depends on the physical but it is not identical. If two people are identical in their physical properties, they must also be identical in their mental properties. But not vice versa.

  30. Kinds of materialism (cont.) 3) Functionalism Mental states are defined by their functional roles • Functional roles relating to behavior and relating to other mental states • Multiple realizability • Example: a chair, addition, pain • Problems with functionalism: Qualia Liberalism

  31. The Mind-Mind Problem What is the relationship between the computational mind and the phenomenal mind? Computational mind: intelligence Phenomenal mind: experience

  32. Reading for next week Required Searle, John. R. (1980). Minds, brains, and programs. In Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (3), 417-457, available at: www.bbsonline.org/documents/a/00/00/04/84/bbs00000484-00/bbs.searle2.html Hofstadter, Douglas (1981), “Reflections” (on “Minds, Brains and Programs”, in Hofstadter & Dennett, The Mind’s I (1981), 373-382 Optional: Sober, Elliott, “Putting the Function Back into Functionalism”, in Mind and Cognition, pgs. 63-70 (will beon reserve next week) Block, Ned, “Troubles with Functionalism” (excerpt), in Mind and Cognition, pgs. 435-440 (will beon reserve next week)

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