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The Unified Conceptual Space Theory: An Enactive Theory of Concepts

Author

  • Joel Parthemore

Summary, in English

Theories of concepts address systematically and productively structured thought. Until the Unified Conceptual Space Theory (UCST), based on Peter Gärdenfors’ Conceptual Spaces Theory, no one had attempted to offer an explicitly enactive theory of concepts. UCST is set apart from its competitors in locating concepts not in the mind (or brain) of the conceptual agent nor in the affordances of the agent’s environment but in the interaction between the two. On the UCST account, concepts are never truly static: conceptual knowledge is always in the process of being "brought forth", such that neither agent nor environment can cleanly be separated from the other, and the preconceptual noumena cannot be reconstructed free of conceptual taint. Through such conceptual coloring, mind extends into the world. Concepts create binary distinctions – beginning, most importantly, with the self/non-self distinction – and discrete entities that mask what are, with respect to the conceptual framework, underlying continua. These distinctions – implying notions of e.g. internal and external, inner experience and outer world – are both conceptually necessaryand, at the same time, lacking prior ontological status. They are meaningful only with respect to

some identifiable observer (which could, in appropriate circumstances, be the organism itself). In consequence, phenomenology has a key role to play, and first-person methods are indispensable to any empirical investigation of concepts.

Publishing year

2013

Language

English

Pages

168-177

Publication/Series

Adaptive Behavior

Volume

21

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Topic

  • Languages and Literature

Keywords

  • extended mind
  • Voronoi tessellation
  • conceptual spaces
  • representation
  • embodiment
  • concepts
  • systematicity
  • productivity
  • autopoiesis
  • enactive
  • enaction

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1741-2633