BustingOutDec2015.pdf (365.08 kB)
Busting out: predictive brains, embodied minds, and the puzzle of the evidentiary veil
Biological brains are increasingly cast as ‘prediction machines’: evolved organs whose core operating principle is to learn about the world by trying to predict their own patterns of sensory stimulation. This, some argue, should lead us to embrace a brain-bound ‘neurocentric’ vision of the mind. The mind, such views suggest, consists entirely in the skull-bound activity of the predictive brain. In this paper I reject the inference from predictive brains to skull-bound minds. Predictive brains, I hope to show, can be apt participants in larger cognitive circuits. The path is thus cleared for a new synthesis in which predictive brains act as entry-points for ‘extended minds’, and embodiment and action contribute constitutively to knowing contact with the world.
Funding
Extended Knowledge; AHRC
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Accepted version
Journal
NousISSN
0029-4624,Publisher
WileyExternal DOI
Issue
4Volume
51Page range
727-753Department affiliated with
- Philosophy Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes