Vygotsky and cognitive science : language and the unification of the social and computational mind
著者
書誌事項
Vygotsky and cognitive science : language and the unification of the social and computational mind
Harvard University Press, 1997
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 293-319) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Is a human being a person or a machine? This book brings together Vygotsky's sociocultural theory of the mind and cognitive science's computational model to show how the mind is both a social construct and a formal device, focusing particularly on language.
目次
- Part 1 Foundation for unification: internalism and the ideology of cognitive science - Luria's peasant and the frame problem, the deprivileging of external causes, Luria's peasant, again (and Fodor on Vygotsky), Vygotsky and the frame problem
- from Plato's problem to Wittgenstein's problem - Plato's answer - the inward turn, universal grammars, troubles in paradise, Wittgenstein's problem
- architectures and contexts - unifying computational and cultural psycholinguistics - incommensurability and unity, cognitive science - a primer, Vygotskyan theory - a primer, architectures and contexts - three prospects for unity. Part 2 Three unities: subjectivity - consciousness and metaconsciousness - consciousness regained, from information processing to self-consciousness, the organization of subjectivity, Vygotskyan demonstrations of metaconsciousness
- control and the language for thought - the importance of reflexivity, defining the language for thought, the limits of private speech research, a context-architecture view of the language for thought, the linguistic structure of the language for thought, computational control and the symptoms of the machine self, run time and relativity
- control disorders - splitting the computational from the social - logic/control dissociations, a catalogue of control disorders, logic versus control, private speech disruptions, the metaconscious effects of control disorders, two final clarifications
- epilogue - is everything cognitive science? - against grand schemes, sociocomputationalism, two prospects for sociocomputationalism, does internalism win out?.
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