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Grounds for Cognition - How Goal-guided Behavior Shapes the Mind (Hardcover)
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Grounds for Cognition - How Goal-guided Behavior Shapes the Mind (Hardcover)
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Q: Why do organisms need cognition?
A: To get information about their environments.
Q: Why such information?
A: Because organisms need to guide their behaviors to goals.
Q: Why guidance?
A: Because it leads to goal satisfaction.
Q: Why goals?
Cognition is a naturally selected response by genetic programs to
the evolutionary pressure of guiding behaviors to goals. Organisms
are material systems that maintain and replicate themselves by
engaging their world in goal-directed ways. This is how guidance of
behavior to goal grounds and explains cognition and the main forms
in which it manages information. Guidance to goal also makes a
difference to the understanding of human cognition. Simpler forms
of cognition evolve to handle fixed informational transactions with
the world, whereas human cognition evolves the abilities to script
flexible goal situations that fit specific contexts of behavior.
This teleoevolutionary approach has important implications for
cognitive science, two of which are programmatic. One is that
information that guides to goal is not exclusively cognitive;
guidance is also affected by ecological facts and regularities as
well as by design assumptions about them. The other implication is
that the functional analyses dominant in cognitive science and
philosophy of mind are incomplete and weak. They are incomplete in
that they focus only on the explicitly encoded cognitive
information and its behavioral consequences, thus ignoring the
larger guidance arrangements; and weak because causal and
functional relations implement but underdetermine goal-directed and
goal-guided procesess.
A work dealing expressly with the foundations of cognitive
science, this book addresses basic but seldom-asked questions about
the evolutionary rationale of cognition and the way this rationale
has shaped the major types of cognition. It also provides a
teleological answer to these basic questions in terms of goal
directedness and particularly guidance of behavior to goal. In so
doing, the work defends the scientific respectability and the
explanatory necessity of teleology by showing that goal
directedness characterizes the work of genetic programs.
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