Understanding the relationship between concepts and experience seems necessary to specifying the content of experience, yet current theories of concepts do not seem up to the job. With Peter Gärdenfors’s conceptual spaces theory as a foundation and with enactivist philosophy as inspiration, we present a proposed extension to conceptual spaces theory and use it to outline a model of the emergence of concepts and experience. We conclude that neither is ultimately primary but each gives rise to the other: i.e., that they co-emerge. Such a model can then serve as the anchor to a theory of concepts more generally. Concepts are most naturally understood in symbolic and representational terms, while much of experience, in contrast, is non-symbolic and non-representational; yet the conflict between the two will, herein, be shown to be more apparent than real. The main contribution of this paper is to argue for, by means of this account of co-emergence, a continuum between “low-level” mental content that is more appropriately understood in highly context-sensitive and directly sensorimotor-based terms, and “high-level” mental content that is more appropriately understood in context-free and representational or symbolic terms. In doing so we conclude that the extreme positions of representationalism and anti-representationalism are fatally flawed.
Kaipainen, Mauri, Antti Hautamäki & Joel Parthemore
2024. Conceptualization for intended action: A dynamic model. Philosophical Psychology 37:8 ► pp. 2497 ff.
Bolívar, Manuel Pedro Rodríguez & Albert J. Meijer
2016. Smart Governance. Social Science Computer Review 34:6 ► pp. 673 ff.
Duro, Richard J., Francisco Bellas & José A. Becerra Permuy
2014. Brain-Like Robotics. In Springer Handbook of Bio-/Neuroinformatics, ► pp. 1019 ff.
Kalkan, Sinan, Nilgün Dag, Onur Yürüten, Anna M. Borghi & Erol Şahin
2014. Verb concepts from affordances. Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systems 15:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Parthemore, Joel
2013. The Unified Conceptual Space Theory: an enactive theory of concepts. Adaptive Behavior 21:3 ► pp. 168 ff.
Parthemore, Joel
2014. From a Sensorimotor to a Sensorimotor++ Account of Embodied Conceptual Cognition. In Contemporary Sensorimotor Theory [Studies in Applied Philosophy, Epistemology and Rational Ethics, 15], ► pp. 137 ff.
Parthemore, Joel
2015. Specification of the Unified Conceptual Space, for Purposes of Empirical Investigation. In Applications of Conceptual Spaces [Synthese Library, 359], ► pp. 223 ff.
Parthemore, Joel
2017. Consciousness, semiosis, and the unbinding problem. Language & Communication 54 ► pp. 36 ff.
PARTHEMORE, JOEL & BLAY WHITBY
2013. WHAT MAKES ANY AGENT A MORAL AGENT? REFLECTIONS ON MACHINE CONSCIOUSNESS AND MORAL AGENCY. International Journal of Machine Consciousness 05:02 ► pp. 105 ff.
Parthemore, Joel & Blay Whitby
2014. Moral Agency, Moral Responsibility, and Artifacts: What Existing Artifacts Fail to Achieve (and Why), and Why They, Nevertheless, Can (and Do!) Make Moral Claims upon Us. International Journal of Machine Consciousness 06:02 ► pp. 141 ff.
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