Neurocognitive Mechanisms: Explaining Biological Cognition
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780198866282
ISBN10:0198866283
Binding:Hardback
No. of pages:416 pages
Size:241x165x30 mm
Weight:1 g
Language:English
253
Category:

Neurocognitive Mechanisms

Explaining Biological Cognition
 
Edition number: 1
Publisher: OUP Oxford
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

Gualtiero Piccinini presents a systematic and rigorous philosophical defence of the computational theory of cognition. His view posits that cognition involves neural computation within multilevel neurocognitive mechanisms, and includes novel ideas about ontology, functions, neural representation, neural computation, and consciousness.

Long description:
In Neurocognitive Mechanisms Gualtiero Piccinini presents the most systematic, rigorous, and comprehensive philosophical defence to date of the computational theory of cognition. His view posits that cognition involves neural computation within multilevel neurocognitive mechanisms, and includes novel ideas about ontology, functions, neural representation, neural computation, and consciousness. He begins by defending an ontologically egalitarian account of composition and realization, according to which all levels are equally real. He then explicates multiple realizability and mechanisms within this ontologically egalitarian framework, defends a goal-contribution account of teleological functions, and defends a mechanistic version of functionalism. This provides the foundation for a mechanistic account of computation, which in turn clarifies the ways in which the computational theory of cognition is a multilevel mechanistic theory supported by contemporary cognitive neuroscience.

Piccinini argues that cognition is computational at least in a generic sense. He defends the computational theory of cognition from standard objections, yet also rebuts putative a priori arguments. He contends that the typical vehicles of neural computations are representations, and that, contrary to the received view, the representations posited by the computational theory of cognition are observable and manipulatable in the laboratory. He also contends that neural computations are neither digital nor analog; instead, neural computations are sui generis. He concludes by investigating the relation between computation and consciousness, suggesting that consciousness may be a functional phenomenon without being computational in nature. This book will be of interest to philosophers of cognitive science as well as neuroscientists.
Table of Contents:
Levels of Being
Mechanisms, Multiple Realizability, and Medium Independence
Functional Mechanisms
Mechanistic Functionalism
The First Computational Theory of Cognition: McCulloch and Pitts's A Logical Calculus of the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity
Computation and Information Processing
Mechanistic Models of Cognition: From Autonomy to Integration
The Cognitive Neuroscience Revolution
The Computational Theory of Cognition
The Church-Turing Fallacy
The Resilience of the Computational Theory of Cognition
Neural Representation
Neural Computation
Computation and the Function of Consciousness