384.126 Logical Foundations of Cognitive Science



Similar documents
Reality in the Eyes of Descartes and Berkeley. By: Nada Shokry 5/21/2013 AUC - Philosophy

Introduction to 30th Anniversary Perspectives on Cognitive Science: Past, Present, and Future

Final Assessment Report of the Review of the Cognitive Science Program (Option) July 2013

Mind & Body Cartesian Dualism

COGNITIVE SCIENCE 222

Methodological Issues for Interdisciplinary Research

Cognitive History Timeline Review of Cognitive Psychology : History

AQA PHILOSOPHY SYLLABUS: USEFUL WEB LINKS

A person relates to the world through many different physical and mental

Course Catalog - Spring 2015

Why I Am Not a Property Dualist

Cognitive Science. Summer 2013

Writing Thesis Defense Papers

Phil 420: Metaphysics Spring [Handout 4] Hilary Putnam: Why There Isn t A Ready-Made World

KNOWLEDGE ORGANIZATION

Computational Scientific Discovery and Cognitive Science Theories

Undergraduate Psychology Major Learning Goals and Outcomes i

Honours programme in Philosophy

1/9. Locke 1: Critique of Innate Ideas

What is Psychology? A set of questions about mental functioning trace back to philosophy Aristotle asked about memory, personality, emotions, etc.

Advanced Placement Psychology Course Syllabus and Survival Guide Mr. Korek O1-HO Purpose of the Course

On the theoretical and methodological foundations for a science of consciousness

Dualism is the belief that the mind is separate from the brain but somehow controls the brain and through it also the rest of the body.

11 Master s degree programme in Philosophy

Epistemology, Ethics and Mind Online MSc/PGDipl/PGCert. SCHOOL of PHILOSOPHY, PSYCHOLOGY

Please see current textbook prices at

Evolutionist of intelligence Introduction

ATINER's Conference Paper Series PHI

How To Understand The Unity Thesis

Question about the History of Psychology Who is considered to have been the Father of the study of Psychology?

Psychology 85 INTRODUCTION TO COGNITIVE SCIENCE Winter Quarter, 2012

How To Teach Philosophy

Creating an Objective-based Syllabus. Danielle Mihram, Director Center for Excellence in Teaching University of Southern California

Jean Piaget: A Cognitive Account of Development

INTELLECTUAL APPROACHES

Psychology Professor Joe W. Hatcher; Associate Professor Kristine A. Kovack-Lesh (Chair) Visiting Professor Jason M. Cowell

Guide to the Focus in Mind, Brain, Behavior For History and Science Concentrators Science and Society Track Honors Eligible

COGNITIVE SCIENCE MASTERS

Dr V. J. Brown. Neuroscience (see Biomedical Sciences) History, Philosophy, Social Anthropology, Theological Studies.

College of Arts and Sciences: Social Science and Humanities Outcomes

PHIL Introduction to Philosophy: Main Problems UNC Chapel Hill Sample Syllabus

Department: PSYC. Course No.: 132. Credits: 3. Title: General Psychology I. Contact: David B. Miller. Content Area: CA 3 Science and Technology

What Is School Mathematics?

PSYCHOLOGY. Professor McKenna Associate Professors Maxwell (chair) and Templeton Assistant Professors Bruininks and Peszka

ON EXTERNAL OBJECTS By Immanuel Kant From Critique of Pure Reason (1781)

Design of an Individualized Major Interdisciplinary Gateway Course

The Slate Is Not Empty: Descartes and Locke on Innate Ideas

PSYCHOLOGY PROGRAM LEARNING GOALS AND OUTCOMES BY COURSE LISTING

LEARNING OUTCOMES FOR THE PSYCHOLOGY MAJOR

CREDIT TRANSFER: GUIDELINES FOR STUDENT TRANSFER AND ARTICULATION AMONG MISSOURI COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES

Argument Mapping 2: Claims and Reasons

General Psychology Fall Instructor: Ms. Julie Brotzen, M.A. Classroom & Time: ED 263 M-W 2:30 3:45

Laplace's Demon. By finishing the work began by Sir Isaac Newton in mathematics, and further

Revision. AS Sociology. Sociological Methods. The relationship between Positivism, Interpretivism and sociological research methods.

Joint Ph.D. Degree in Psychology and Computer Science and Engineering

9.85 Cognition in Infancy and Early Childhood. Lecture 2: Theoretical perspectives in developmental psychology: Piaget

PSYCHOLOGY PROGRAM LEARNING GOALS, LEARNING OUTCOMES AND COURSE ALLIGNMENT MATRIX. 8 Oct. 2010

UNIVERSITY OF BELGRADE FACULTY OF PHILOSOPHY. Part two: INFORMATION ON DEGREE PROGRAMS

Date of birth: January 12, 1972 Citizenship: U.S.A. Languages: English ( native), French ( reading only)

Strong and Weak Emergence

College-wide Goal Assessment Plans (SoA&S Assessment Coordinator September 24, 2015)

Psychology AP. Summer Assignment. Ms. Van Duyne. 1. Please read the attached first chapter of the textbook Prologue: the Story of Psychology.

Zombies cannot be there

Students must have completed or be currently enrolled in courses that fulfill all program requirements at the time of petition.

Book Review of Rosenhouse, The Monty Hall Problem. Leslie Burkholder 1

CULTURAL STUDIES AND CROSS-CULTURAL CAPABILITY

Psych 3HP3 History of Psychology Fall 2013

AP Psychology Course Syllabus and Survival Guide

Introduction to Cognitive Science

THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBURGH. PROGRAMME SPECIFICATION M.A. Honours in Psychology and Business Studies1

Guidelines for Integrative Core Curriculum Themes and Perspectives Designations

Assumptions of Instructional Systems Design

NEUR/PSYC 125 Introduction to Behavioral Neuroscience Fall 15 M-W-F 9:00 9:50 SOBA 162 Page 1

The Mind Body Problem: An Overview

SECTION 4: DOCUMENT ORGANIZATION

Professor S D Reicher. Needs. Needs. Adults with Learning Disabilities who have Significant and Complex Needs. Health Psychology

Psychology has been considered to have an autonomy from the other sciences (especially

Models of Dissertation Research in Design

Hume on identity over time and persons

Standards for Certification in Early Childhood Education [ ]

LCS 11: Cognitive Science Chinese room argument

What is Artificial Intelligence?

Last time we had arrived at the following provisional interpretation of Aquinas second way:

#HUMN-104 INTRODUCTION TO PHILOSOPHY

Course Completion Roadmap. Others Total

Psychology. Academic Requirements. Academic Requirements. Career Opportunities. Minor. Major. Mount Mercy University 1

ACADEMIC POLICY AND PLANNING COMMITTEE REQUEST FOR AHC GENERAL EDUCATION CONSIDERATION

Nancy Rubino, PhD Senior Director, Office of Academic Initiatives The College Board

THE SEMANTIC WEB AND IT`S APPLICATIONS

[pre-publication draft; please do not cite without permission of author]

Humberto Maturana Romesín

WRITING A RESEARCH PAPER FOR A GRADUATE SEMINAR IN POLITICAL SCIENCE Ashley Leeds Rice University

Arkansas Teaching Standards

Transcription:

384.126 Logical Foundations of Cognitive Science Harold Boley NRC-IIT Fredericton Faculty of Computer Science University of New Brunswick Canada Institute of Computer Technology, TU Vienna Winter Semester 2008/09 Adapted from a course by Kelly Inglis on Philosophy and Cognitive Science, Philosophy Dept., University of Hong Kong, 2007-08

Optional Readings No course textbook. Some readings are available online. 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

Topics for today What is cognitive science? What is the role of philosophy and logic in cognitive science? The mind-body problem

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

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

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

Cognitive science is interdisciplinary Draws on: psychology neuroscience computer science anthropology linguistics philosophy logic

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

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. Anthropology: Learn how the brain evolved. Learn how thinking differs in different cultures. Learn what thinking processes remain the same in all cultures.

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. Philosophy and Logic: Putting it all together Formalizing theories about it Computer Science: Model functions of the brain in computer programs. Learn how the brain might accomplish these functions. Visualize (e.g. Grailog), mechanize, and implement logics

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 neural-network architecture?

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?

The Role of Philosophy and Logic in Cognitive Science Philosophy and Logic are sometimes dismissed as obscure, meaningless and trivial. How can such abstract unworldly disciplines contribute to a serious scientific quest to understand the mind? What we will do? Analysis Conceptual clarification Asking questions Model (and criticize and improve) our theories

What do philosophers and logicians 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.

In What s philosophy got to do with it?, Tim van Gelder lists several roles a philosopher can play in regards to cognitive science: 1) 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

1) 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, asyet-unimagined ways for things to be? E.g. theory of relativity

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.

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.

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.

The Mind-Body Problem How can the brain think? Two possibilities: 1) Dualism 2) Materialism

Dualism Two types of stuff or properties of stuff: physical and mental Kinds of dualism: 1) 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

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

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?

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

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

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.

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

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

Grailog: Graph inscribed logic Course employs Grailog for providing graph visualizations of cognitive and metacognitive content in logic Examples will introduce Grailog as we go One class will be devoted specifically to Grailog: http://www.ict.tuwien.ac.at/lva/boley_lfcs/lfcs-grailog.pdf

Optional Readings for next week Focus: Extra: 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 Sober, Elliott, Putting the Function Back into Functionalism, in Mind and Cognition, pgs. 63-70 Block, Ned, Troubles with Functionalism (excerpt), in Mind and Cognition, pgs. 435-440