VERSUS n. 112-113 (january-december 2011)

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The External Mind. Perspectives on Semiosis, Distribution and Situation in Cognition

edited by Riccardo Fusaroli, Tommaso Granelli, Claudio Paolucci

Isbn: NA Issn: 0393-8255

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A recent turn in social and cognitive sciences focuses on the role of actions and networks of interaction, making practices central for cognitive processes. While initially an embarrassing variable to be locally managed, pragmatic processes become a necessary condition for description of cognitive processes. Cognition, thus, far from being conceived as localized (for instance in the mind and in the body), appears now to be distributed and situated in a bundle of practices and emerges as a mediated process between a plurality of instances that cross and redefine the biological barriers of the individual. Extended mind, distributed cognition, situated action and cognition and actor-network theory are all different approaches that dwell on the crucial role of the mediation between human and non-human actors (including artifacts, collective subjects, semiotic systems, etc.), of the intersubjective and interactive dimension and of the strong operative and cognitive role of the production of signs and representations. The aim is not a forced unification of this multi-disciplinary heterogeneity, as much as it seeks a joint effort that, through the existing differences, can highlight: i) the polyphony of a mind irreducible to processes happening under the skin of the individual; ii) the multiplicity of the meaning trajectories the action; iii) the delocalization of cognition inside networks in which the individual is only a node and not the exclusive organizing centre or referent. Through articles by Michael Wheeler, Massimiliano Cappuccio, Shaun Gallagher, Claudio Paolucci, Riccardo Fusaroli, Tommaso Granelli, Charles Goodwin, David Kirsh, Ivan Rosero, Robert Lecusay and Michael Cole, this Versus sketches such turns, bringing the role of semiotics, both as a discipline and as a field of problems, on the foreground. In the trajectories here delineated it is possible to see the seeds of a structural conception of cognition, able to critically keep together functionalist and enactivist perspective.

The External Mind: an Introduction

by Riccardo Fusaroli, Claudio Paolucci

pp. 3-31

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The sign of the Hand: Symbolic Practices and the Extended Mind

by Massimiliano Cappuccio, Michael Wheeler

pp. 33-55

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The Overextended Mind

by Shaun Gallagher

pp. 57-68

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The "External Mind": Semiotics, Pragmatism, Extended Mind and Distributed Cognition

by Claudio Paolucci

pp. 69-96

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The Social Horizon of Embodied Language and Material Symbols

by Riccardo Fusaroli

pp. 97-123

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Semiotics and Theories of Situated/Distributed Action and Cognition: a Dialogue and Many Intersections

by Tommaso Granelli

pp. 125-167

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Building Action in Public Environments with Diverse Semiotic Resources

by Charles Goodwin

pp. 169-182

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How Marking in Dance Constitutes Thinking with the Body

by David Kirsh

pp. 183-214

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Ambiguous Coordination: Collaboration in Informal Science Education Research

by Ivan Rosero, Robert Lecusay, Michael Cole

pp. 215-240

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Lorenzo Magnani, Abductive Cognition

by Riccardo Fusaroli

pp. 241-242

Recensione a The Information content of Visual Process

by Claudio Paolucci

pp. 242-245