the extended mind (1998) by andy clark and david chalmers what are the limits of the mind? skin...

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Consider three possibilities in playing a game like Tetris: 1) Mental rotation of pieces to see if they fit a slot 2) Pushing a button to make the computer rotate a piece to see if it fits 3)A brain implant that can be mentally activated by the player to rotate a piece to see if it fits 1 is a mental process. Is 3? Is 2?

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The Extended Mind (1998) by Andy Clark and David Chalmers What are the limits of the mind? Skin and skull? People and their tools? The world? Clark and Chalmers proposal -- active externalism An external tool can be part of active cognition Objects outside the head can contain some mental states of a subject. A persons mind can extend to bits of the world around him. Andy Clark and David Chalmers Consider three possibilities in playing a game like Tetris: 1) Mental rotation of pieces to see if they fit a slot 2) Pushing a button to make the computer rotate a piece to see if it fits 3)A brain implant that can be mentally activated by the player to rotate a piece to see if it fits 1 is a mental process. Is 3? Is 2? Inge: Wants to go to the Museum of Modern Art Remembers its on 53 rd Street Goes to 53 rd Street Conscious thought wants to go Retrieval of information from memory (i.e. inactive mental state becomes active mental state) Use of retrieved information Otto: Has Alzheimers, so cant remember things well Uses a notebook to record useful information Wants to go to the Museum of Modern Art Checks his notebook, sees that it is on 53 rd St. Goes to 53 rd St. Accessing the information in passively recorded in his notebook is like accessing the information passively recorded in his memory. Chalmers and Clark argue that the information in Ottos notebook is just like the information in Inges memory. They are both mental states. The notebook has become part of Ottos mind. Essential details: Otto always keeps his notebook with him. Otto always checks his notebook automatically when asked a question (or when wondering about a question) that relates to the information in his notebook Otto trusts his notebook implicitly (just as much as Inge trusts her memory) Parity Principle If, as we confront some task, a part of the world functions as a process which, were it to go on in the head, we would have no hesitation in accepting as part of the cognitive process, then that part of the world is (for that time) part of the cognitive process. (Clark and Chalmers (1998)) Parity means equality or equivalence. Claim: an external device (e.g. notebook) can be an extension of a persons mind, if the following conditions are met: The external device is almost always accessible (e.g. Otto carries the notebook around with him) The information is easy to access (e.g. easy to read) The external device is almost always accessed in relevant situations (e.g. Otto always checks his notebook when thinking about the location of the museum) The person believes in the information contained in the external device as readily and completely as someone believes his own memory (e.g. Otto completely trusts his notebook) Chalmers newer addition to thought experiment: iphone Chalmers has an iphone that not only functions as memory storage, but also performs mental functions for him such as: manipulation of information decision making calculation memory prompting 1) external memory devices are made of different kinds of stuff 2) external memory devices are passive, not active 3) external memory devices need to be deliberately accessed 4) external memory devices can be tampered with Leonard has anterograde amnesia cant make new memories Relies on notes and tattoos to function as his memory Does he then have new memories? Are his notes and/or his tattoos part of his mind? Clark, Andy and Chalmers, David (1998), The Extended Mind in Analysis 58, 10-23, available at: Clark, Andy, Mementos Revenge: The Extended Mind, Extended, to appear in R. Menary (ed.) Papers on the Extended Mind, available at:revenge2.pdf