Phenomenology. Anthony Chemero
rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_1dfa0eb5-7517-52a5-94ac-fa8dcf21392c">10 James J. Gibson and Ecological Psychology 10.1 Gibson’s early work: Two examples 10.2 The ecological approach 10.3 Ecological ontology 10.4 Affordances and invitations Key terms Further reading
16 11 Hubert Dreyfus and the Phenomenological Critique of Cognitivism 11.1 The cognitive revolution and cognitive science 11.2 “Alchemy and artificial intelligence” 11.3 What Computers Can’t Do 11.4 Heideggerian artificial intelligence Key terms Further reading
17 12 Enactivism and the Embodied Mind 12.1 Embodied, embedded, extended, enactive 12.2 The original enactivism 12.3 Other enactivisms: The sensorimotor approach and radical enactivism 12.4 Enactivism as a philosophy of nature Key terms Further reading
18 13 Phenomenological Cognitive Science 13.1 The frame problem 13.2 Radical embodied cognitive science 13.3 Dynamical systems theory 13.4 Heideggerian cognitive science 13.5 The future of scientific phenomenology Key terms Further reading
19 References
20 Index
Guide
1 Cover
9 Index
List of Illustrations
1 Chapter 55.1 The Hermann grid5.2 Mach bands5.3 The Law of Proximity5.4 The Law of Similarity5.5 The Law of Direction
2 Chapter 1010.1 Example of a field of safe travel10.2 Body and mind
3 Chapter 1212.1 Co-emergence of self and world
4 Chapter 1313.1 A unified system13.2 The HKB model13.3 A control system for a simple robot13.4 Cognition as a nested, self-organized, dynamical system
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