Program

Research Programs: Fellowships for University Teachers

Period of Performance

11/1/2011 - 10/31/2012

Funding Totals

$50,400.00 (approved)
$50,400.00 (awarded)


The Machinery of Meaning: A Philosophical Foundation for Cognitive Science

FAIN: FA-56081-11

Michael Rescorla
UCLA; Regents of the University of California, Los Angeles (Santa Barbara, CA 93106-0001)

Cognitive science models mental activity as digital computation. Yet many philosophers worry that computational modeling cannot honor a crucial feature of the mind: its capacity to represent the world. I will address this worry by trying to honor the mind's representational nature within a computational setting. I develop my approach by drawing on logic, Artificial Intelligence, and cognitive psychology. My goal is to delineate a novel view of how the mind works, a view that honors two compelling thoughts: first, that the mind is a machine; second, that the mind is an inherently representational organ. Such a view would illuminate ancient debates about the causal structure of mental activity. It would also provide a compelling new philosophical foundation for cognitive science. Finally, it would clarify the relation between minds and texts by clarifying a crucial aspect of both minds and texts: the capacity to represent.





Associated Products

The Causal Relevance of Content to Computation (Article)
Title: The Causal Relevance of Content to Computation
Author: Michael Rescorla
Abstract: Many philosophers worry that the computational theory of mind (CTM) engenders epiphenomenalism. Building on Block’s (1990) discussion, I formulate a particularly troubling version of this worry. I then present a novel solution to CTM’s epiphenomenalist conundrum. I develop my solution within an interventionist theory of causal relevance, as espoused by Woodward (2003) and others. My solution departs substantially from orthodox versions of CTM. In particular, I reject the widespread picture of digital computation as formal syntactic manipulation.
Year: 2012
Primary URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291933-1592
Primary URL Description: journal website
Access Model: Subscription
Format: Journal
Periodical Title: Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
Publisher: Wiley

How to Integrate Representation into Computational Modeling, and Why We Should (Article)
Title: How to Integrate Representation into Computational Modeling, and Why We Should
Author: Michael Rescorla
Abstract: I argue that Chalmers’s proposed computational foundation conflicts with contemporary cognitive science. I present an alternative approach to modeling the mind computationally. On my alternative approach, computational models can individuate mental states in representational terms, without any appeal to organizationally invariant properties. I develop my approach through case studies drawn from cognitive psychology, CS, and AI.
Year: 2012
Primary URL: http://j-cs.org/index/index.php
Primary URL Description: journal website
Access Model: Subscription; however, this particular issue of the journal is open access
Format: Journal
Periodical Title: Journal of Cognitive Science
Publisher: Institute for Cognitive Science

A Theory of Computational Implementation (Article)
Title: A Theory of Computational Implementation
Author: Michael Rescorla
Abstract: I articulate and defend a new theory of what it is for a physical system to implement an abstract computational model. According to my descriptivist theory, a physical system implements a computational model just in case the model accurately describes the system. Specifically, the system must reliably transit between computational states in accord with mechanical instructions encoded by the model. I contrast my theory with an influential approach to computational implementation espoused by Chalmers, Putnam, and others. I deploy my theory to illuminate the relation between computation and representation. I also address arguments, propounded by Putnam and Searle, that computational implementation is trivial.
Year: 2014
Primary URL: http://link.springer.com/journal/11229
Primary URL Description: journal website
Access Model: Subscription
Format: Journal
Periodical Title: Synthese
Publisher: Springer