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Overcoming deadlock: Scientific and ethical reasons to embrace the extended mind thesis

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Author(s)
Vold Karina
Keywords
extended cognition
intracranialism
embedded mind
ethics
theory selection
cognitive rehabilitation
Philosophy (General)
B1-5802

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/633846
Online Access
https://doaj.org/article/bd87c2d0076f4b80a3b08451c3e18653
Abstract
The extended mind thesis maintains that while minds may be centrally located in one’s brain-and-body, they are sometimes partly constituted by tools in our environment. Critics argue that we have no reason to move from the claim that cognition is embedded in the environment to the stronger claim that cognition can be constituted by the environment. I will argue that there are normative reasons, both scientific and ethical, for preferring the extended account of the mind to the rival embedded account.
Date
2018-01-01
Type
Article
Identifier
oai:doaj.org/article:bd87c2d0076f4b80a3b08451c3e18653
0353-5738
2334-8577
10.2298/FID1804489V
https://doaj.org/article/bd87c2d0076f4b80a3b08451c3e18653
Collections
Philosophical Ethics

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