In this engaging book, Jerry Fodor argues against the widely held view that mental processes are largely computations, that the architecture of cognition is massively modular, and that the explanation of our innate mental structure is basically Darwinian. Although Fodor has praised the computational theory of mind as the best theory of cognition that we have got, he considers it to be only a fragment of the truth. In fact, he claims, cognitive scientists do not really know much yet about how the mind works (the book's title refers to Steve Pinker's How the Mind Works).Fodor's primary aim is to explore the relationship among computational and modular theories of mind, nativism, and evolutionary psychology. Along the way, he explains how Chomsky's version of nativism differs from that of the widely received New Synthesis approach. He concludes that although we have no grounds to suppose that most of the mind is modular, we have no idea how nonmodular cognition could work. Thus, according to Fodor, cognitive science has hardly gotten started.
Okay, here's the quick-and-dirty to Jerry Fodor's The Mind Doesn't Work That Way. Fodor argues that this dominant view in psychology, that the mind is set up as a bunch of little subsystems, like little boxes or modules, is a false picture of the mind because basically it's not clear how any of these modules would share information with one another or revise themselves on the basis of new information. Let me try to make this clear.
Imagine you've got your mind set up along the lines that a lot of people believe it is these days in cognitive science. You got your little box for language, your box for interpreting music and rhythm, your box for understanding human and animal behavior, etc. Now, if the brain were just this series of boxes geared toward specific tasks, it's not clear (a) how information gets sorted into these boxes, (b) how the boxes communicate with one another, and (c) how your beliefs change.
Here's an illustration. Think about Newton who one day asked the question, Why do objects fall down instead of up? Before Newton, the best theory going was Aristotle's, which said that objects just like to be close to the ground. Or if that seems a little too odd to you, imagine your uneducated ancestor saying, "Because that's just what they do." It's because Newton was curious about something that seemed so simple and obvious that a host of other questions and ideas came up, and then we eventually get the law of gravity, which not only explains why objects fall down, but why planets orbit and tides move, to name a few examples.
Consider that computational picture is correct, that we just have a bunch of little boxes in our minds, and Newton's mind was so different. Then how in the heck did Newton infer the law of gravity? What allowed for that change of thought, or that line of reasoning? The best answer is that there are capacities that we human beings have that just can't be compartmentalized as little subsystems, that must operate across subsystems and allow for revision of belief, otherwise we couldn't do this kind of science or rational inquiry.
פודור הוא הפילוסוף עם הכתיבה הכי טובה שאני מכיר אולי חוץ מלואיס. חוץ מזה הוא גם משכנע. אבל ממליץ לקרוא את המאמר של לודוויג ושניידר שמבקר את הטיעון מתוך התכונות הגלובליות נגד CToM מ2008.
I don't really like Philosophy of Mind because its claims are largely inane. But I do like it when someone takes a grounded serious stock of current models of cognition and tells exactly what they can and can't plausibly do. Fodor does that here.
One of the most important books about cognitive science, especially in this current era of machine learning madness. It reminds us about the limits of our current understanding and urges us to be humble.
At this weird place where I don't know whether I like Fodor because I find his ideas insightful or I like him because of the way he writes. Interesting read nonetheless.
An important book in that the author raises some significant objections to basic assumptions we make in studying the processes and mechanics of thinking. These assumptions lead to even more significant contradictions in the public understanding of “intelligence” as being something tranferable and objective.
An important book to keep in mind while trying to crack the scientific methods to match investigating cognition.
This is supposed to be a refutation of Steven Pinker's How the Mind Works. The prose is heavy, but if I understood it correctly, Fodor argues that the mind cannot be a Turing machine because the mind performs abduction and a Turing machine cannot do it. Sorry, but it can: search for " Abductive Constraint Logic Programming"!