enactivism

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Carvalho, E. M. (2021).  The shared know-how in Linguistic Bodies. Revista Filosofia Unisinos. 22(1), 94-101. AbstractWebsite

The authors of Linguistic Bodies appeal to shared know-how to explain the social and participatory interactions upon which linguistic skills and agency rest. However, some issues lurk around the notion of shared know-how and require attention and clarification. In particular, one issue concerns the agent behind the shared know-how, a second one concerns whether shared know-how can be reducible to individual know-how or not. In this paper, I sustain that there is no single answer to the first issue; depending on the case, shared know-how can belong to the participants of a social activity or to the system the participants bring forth together. In relation to the second issue, I sustain, following the authors, a non-reductive account of shared know-how. I also suggest that responsiveness to others, which is a fundamental element of shared know-how, can be extended by perceptual learning.

Carvalho, E. M., & Rolla G. (2020).  An enactive-ecological approach to information and uncertainty. Frontiers in Psychology. 11, 1-11. AbstractFrontiers in Psychology

Information is a central notion for cognitive sciences and neurosciences, but there is no agreement on what it means for a cognitive system to acquire information about its surroundings. In this paper, we approximate three influential views on information: the one at play in ecological psychology, which is sometimes called information for action; the notion of information as covariance as developed by some enactivists, and the idea of information as minimization of uncertainty as presented by Shannon. Our main thesis is that information for action can be construed as covariant information, and that learning to perceive covariant information is a matter of minimizing uncertainty through skilled performance. We argue that the agent’s cognitive system conveys information for acting in an environment by minimizing uncertainty about how to achieve her intended goals in that environment. We conclude by reviewing empirical findings that support our view and by showing how direct learning, seen as instance of ecological rationality at work, is how mere possibilities for action are turned into embodied know-how. Finally, we indicate the affinity between direct learning and sense-making activity.

Carvalho, E. M., & Rolla G. (2020).  O Desafio da Integração Explanatória para o Enativismo. Prometheus. 33, 161-181. AbstractWebsite

Enativismo é a família de teorias que interpretam a ação como constitutiva da cognição e que rejeitam a necessidade de postular representações para explicar todas as atividades cognitivas. O reconhecimento de um modo biologicamente básico e não representacional de cognição, no entanto, levanta a questão sobre como explicar atos cognitivos superiores ou complexos, o que chamamos de desafio de integração explanatória. Neste artigo, examinamos criticamente algumas tentativas de atender a esse desafio através do escalonamento ascendente (scale up) da cognição básica e do escalonamento descendente (scale down) da cognição complexa dentro do programa de pesquisa enativista.