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La antigua oposicion entre materia y mente persiste aun hoy en dia en el modo en que estudiamos el cerebro. Segun Andy Clark, si abordamos la cognicion como una mera resolucion de problemas nos estamos olvidando tanto del cuerpo como del mundo en el que ha evolucionado. De manera que, aunque lo mental suele abordarse como una esfera separada tanto del cuerpo como del mundo, una clave para comprender el cerebro es concebirlo como el lugar desde el que se controla la actividad corporal. Y desde este cambio de paradigma nos sera entonces ya posible proponer la construccion de una ciencia cognitiva de la mente corporea. En el presente libro, Clark se enfrenta a la cuestion fundamental de los nuevos instrumentos y tecnicas que son necesarios para comprender esta ciencia incipiente. Asi, se ocupa de una amplia gama de conductas adaptativas, desde la locomocion de las cucarachas hasta el papel de los artefactos linguisticos en el pensamiento de nivel superior; entrelaza ideas y metodologias de la robotica real, la neurociencia, la psicologia infantil y la vida artificial; y, finalmente, describe y discute todas estas influencias, destacando los peligros, las dificultades y las ramificaciones de una perspectiva de la mente orientada hacia la accion.

304 pages, Paperback

First published November 30, 1996

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Andy Clark

22 books188 followers
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Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews
526 reviews19 followers
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September 24, 2018
I did the readings in this for a class I took as an undergrad. I remember nothing about it. I'm not even sure if was the class was the one taught by the extremely hot* man or some other class. I nearly got rid of it, but I think I saw it on the shelf of another teacher I had a crush on** and so I looked at the book again and none of the words made any sense. But now I'm out of school and married to a man who looked inside this and said, "Yeah, this guy wants to be Alan Watts" and closed it again.

I tried to read Alan Watts once. So, the only reasonable place for this book is in the donation box at work. So long, book! I'm glad I didn't marry an academic!

* Hot in both senses. Very handsome and constantly sweating.

** As God is my witness, there were only two. Why they should converge on this book is a mystery, SURELY.
Profile Image for Jacob.
20 reviews5 followers
October 24, 2008
"Hey Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty!! So glad you were able to make it! Huh? You weren't invited? Eh, well, nevermind that. Let me grab you two some beers and introduce you to my good ol' buddy over here, anglo-american philosophy of mind."
Profile Image for Benjamin.
140 reviews22 followers
January 28, 2009
Back in my other life as a philosophy student, this book was what got me interested in cognitive science. Clark was at Washington University at the time, and I had grand plans for driving to St. Louis and stalking him until he took me on as a grad student. Thankfully for my arrest record, this never happened. But I still think he's an important theorist--his work stands right at the gap between the meat-stuff and the mind-stuff. This book in particular, which looks at the way we use "off-board" computing--interacting with the world around us, then perceiving the results of that interaction--to augment the brain's own processing, has a lot of relevance to designing efficient robot manipulators.
Profile Image for Val Delane.
16 reviews93 followers
July 10, 2016
Cogscigasm! This book might be even _more_ relevant now than when it was published 14 years ago, given how the border is blurring between our carbon-based brains and silicon-based exocortex. Sure, the interface is still a bit clumsy, but really--would you let anyone take away your smartphone other than prying it from your cold, dead fingers? Although Clark makes it clear that intelligence extends into the environment, he also argues quite convincingly that our physical bodies are intrinsic to the process of learning and thinking--which implies that full consciousness upload to silicon (the Rapture of the Nerds) may be impractical, or at least require that a body be part of the model.
Profile Image for Kate.
1,289 reviews
September 11, 2013
"Language is the ultimate artifact."

"What is displayed is just a specially tailored summary of the results of certain episodes of internal activity."

"The 'good ideas' emerged as the fruits of these repeated little interactions between me and various external media."

"I am not one inner voice but many."

"I consist of multiple mindless streams of highly parallel and often relatively independent computational processes."

"My single voice is no more than a literary conceit."

Profile Image for Zedder.
128 reviews
August 3, 2007
Just re-read this in my phi. mind class. It's really good, and contains tons of examples of experiments with interestingly suggestive results.
Profile Image for Marcelo Coelho.
2 reviews1 follower
Want to read
February 26, 2008
"no intelligence without environment" is a good catch phrase for it~
jeevan
Profile Image for Luis Miguel.
63 reviews2 followers
November 2, 2021
Me ha dado una perspectiva radicalmente nueva de la mente. No me lo esperaba tan interesante.
24 reviews2 followers
June 10, 2022
Bien escrito y buena intro a la ciencia cognitiva corporizada. Creo que es poco concluyente al explicar la mente extendida y su enfoque representacionalista no le hace ningún favor. Pero buen libro
Displaying 1 - 12 of 12 reviews

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