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This book explores how predictive processing, which argues that our
brains are constantly generating and updating hypotheses about our
external conditions, sheds new light on the nature of the mind. It
shows how it is similar to and expands other theoretical approaches
that emphasize the active role of the mind and its dynamic
function. Offering a complete guide to the philosophical and
empirical implications of predictive processing, contributors bring
perspectives from philosophy, neuroscience, and psychology.
Together, they explore the many philosophical applications of
predictive processing and its exciting potential across mental
health, cognitive science, neuroscience, and robotics. Presenting
an extensive and balanced overview of the subject, The Philosophy
and Science of Predictive Processing is a landmark volume within
philosophy of mind.
Philosophy for Children (P4C) has long been considered as crucial
for children's ethical and moral education and a decisive
contribution for education for the democratic life. The book
gathers contributions from experts in the field who reflect on
fundamental issues on how childhood and ethics are interrelated
within the P4C movement. The main interest of this volume is to
offer an understanding of how different philosophical conceptions
of childhood can be coordinated with different ethical and
meta-ethical philosophical considerations in P4C addressing topics
such as P4C and relativism, P4C and Virtue ethics, ethics and
emotions in P4C, philosophical commitments and P4C application, and
Socratic practice within a pragmatist framework. A
thought-provoking collection about how assumptions of particular
philosophical conceptions of childhood modify moral and ethical
education and a testimony of the undeniable contribution of P4C for
moral education and reconceptualization of childhood.
This book explores how predictive processing, which argues that our
brains are constantly generating and updating hypotheses about our
external conditions, sheds new light on the nature of the mind. It
shows how it is similar to and expands other theoretical approaches
that emphasize the active role of the mind and its dynamic
function. Offering a complete guide to the philosophical and
empirical implications of predictive processing, contributors bring
perspectives from philosophy, neuroscience, and psychology.
Together, they explore the many philosophical applications of
predictive processing and its exciting potential across mental
health, cognitive science, neuroscience, and robotics. Presenting
an extensive and balanced overview of the subject, The Philosophy
and Science of Predictive Processing is a landmark volume within
philosophy of mind.
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