文档介绍:Things and Places
How the Mind Connects with the World
cognitive science/philosophy
Things and Places Zenon W. Pylyshyn
hnsadPlaces and Things
Zenon W. Pylyshyn is Board of Governors “Pylyshyn’s bold and provocative thesis, that primitive object tags in early vision constitute a form of In Things and Places, Zenon Pylyshyn argues that
Professor of Cognitive Science at Rutgers basic intentional contact with the world, brings much-needed empirical illumination to such hot How the Mind Connects with the World the process of incrementally constructing perceptual
Center for Cognitive Science. He is the author philosophical topics as nonconceptual content, conscious experience, and demonstrative thought. A representations, solving the binding problem (determining
of Seeing and Visualizing: It’s Not What You must-read for any philosopher of mind.” which properties go together), and, more generally,
grounding perceptual representations in experience arise
Think (2003) putation and Cognition: Joseph Levine, Professor of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Toward a Foundation for Cognitive Science from the nonconceptual capacity to pick out and keep
track of a small number of sensory individuals. He proposes
(1984), both published by The MIT Press, as “Pylyshyn takes on the hoary question of how vision manages to represent objects and spatial relations,
a mechanism in early vision that allows us to select
well as over a hundred scientific papers on proposing a theory of a nonconceptual, demonstrative tracking of objects, as opposed to locations.
a limited number of sensory objects, to reidentify each of
perception, attention, and putational With his usual lucidity and imagination, he shows how such an account might begin to explain
them under certain conditions as the same individual
theory of mind. a wide range of facts about conscious visual experience and the relation of thought to reality. There’s
seen before, and to kee