
The Mechanization of the Mind
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As Dupuy explains, the founders of cognitive science--or, as they called it, "cybernetics"--drew passion and energy from two convictions: that the mind operates like a machine and that physical laws explain how nature can appear to have meaning. Armed with these convictions, they laid the foundations not only for cognitive science but also artificial intelligence, and foreshadowed the development of chaos theory, complexity theory, and a variety of other major scientific and philosophical breakthroughs. Today, their ideas speak directly to controversies that rage between cognitivists and connectionists, eliminative materialists and Wittgensteinians, functionalists and anti-reductionists. However, despite their genuine achievements, the cyberneticians had too much confidence in the power of their theories and made serious mistakes that led the next generation of thinkers to ignore their work. The development of a scientific theory of mind was thus significantly delayed.
A profound and beautifully written book, The Mechanization of the Mind brings back to life the intellectual brilliance and excitement that attended the birth of cognitive science more than fifty years ago, and recasts our understanding of the history of the twentieth century thought.
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Content
- Cover
- Half-title Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication Page
- Contents
- Preface to the English-Language Edition
- Introduction. The Self-Mechanized Mind
- The Cybernetic Credo
- Cybernetics and Cognitivism
- The Question of Humanism
- History of Science vs. History of Ideas
- Chapter 1. The Fascination with Models
- The Virtue of Models
- Manipulating Representations
- The Turing Machine
- Knowing as Simulating
- Chapter 2. A Poorly Loved Parent
- A New Scienza Nuova?
- Mechanizing the Human
- Brain/Mind/Machine
- McCulloch's Neurons
- Connectionism vs. Cognitivism
- Von Neumann's Machine
- Chapter 3. The Limits of Interdisciplinarity
- The Macy Conferences
- The Cyberneticians in Debate
- Unifying the Work of the Mind
- The Physicalist Temptation
- Chapter 4. Philosophy and Cognition
- Naturalizing Epistemology
- The Obstacle of Intentionality
- Brentano Betrayed
- The Missed Encounter with Phenomenology
- A Subjectless Philosophy of Mind
- McCulloch vs. Wiener
- Chapter 5. From Information to Complexity
- Information and Physicalism
- Between Form, Chance, and Meaning
- Cooperation and Cognition
- Cybernetic Totalities
- System and Autonomy
- Complexity: The Model Becomes Blurred
- Chapter 6. Aspects of a Failure
- Learning about Complexity
- The "Ashby Case," or the Return to Metaphysics
- Subjectless Processes
- The Missed Rendezvous with the Human Sciences
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
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