Digital Turn in Epistemology

Agenda

27 - 29 June 2018
Antwerp

Receiving Cognition, Antwerp

The cognitive sciences, including its neural branches, continue to flourish. But what exactly is cognition? Recent developments in Embodied, Embedded and Enactive approaches to cognition, or E-cognition, have drawn attention to the numerous ways in which embodied situated interaction might be more intimately related to cognition than previously acknowledged. E-cognition is often taken to raise concerns about the tenability of a conception of cognition according to which in-the-head representational and/or computational mechanisms breathe cognitive life into organismic activities that would otherwise be mere bodily motion. But do E-factors call for a replacement or merely a reform of standard conceptions of cognition?  And what exactly should be the new  concept of cognition? Relatedly, the arrival of E-cognition leads to such questions as whether or not we need to reconsider the relation between cognition (including perception) and behavior, what explanations of cognition consist of, and what role the brain should play in such explanations. 
 
The conference will offer the opportunity to engage with these questions, in the light of, inter alia, the views of the authors of recent books on conference themes—Michael Anderson’s After Phrenology, MIT Press 2014;  Louise Barrett’s Beyond the Brain, Princeton University Press 2011; Giovanna Colombetti’s The Feeling Body, MIT Press 2013, and Daniel D. Hutto and Erik Myin’s Evolving Enactivism, MIT Press 2017.
  
Confirmed Invited Speakers:
 
Michael Anderson, Western Ontario;
Louise Barrett, Lethbridge;
Rosa Cao, Stanford;
Giovanna Colombetti, Exeter;
Dan Hutto, Wollongong;
Fred Keijzer, Groningen.
 
Registration will cost 50 Euro’s; pre-registration required. Details about registering will be soon available at:
 
 
This conference is organized by Karim Zahidi, Ludger van Dijk and Erik Myin, at the Centre for Philosophical Psychology, University of Antwerp.