Vygotsky and cognitive science : language and the unification of the social and computational mind /
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Author / Creator: | Frawley, William, 1953- |
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Imprint: | Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1997. |
Description: | viii, 333 p. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/2763404 |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Internalism and the Ideology of Cognitive Science. 1.1. Luria's Peasant and the Frame Problem. 1.2. The Deprivileging of External Causes. 1.3. Luria's Peasant, Again (and Fodor on Vygotsky). 1.4. Vygotsky and the Frame Problem
- 2. From Plato's Problem to Wittgenstein's Problem. 2.1. Plato's Answer: The Inward Turn. 2.2. Universal Grammars. 2.3. Troubles in Paradise. 2.4. Wittgenstein's Problem
- 3. Architectures and Contexts: Unifying Computational and Cultural Psycholinguistics. 3.1. Incommensurablity and Unity. 3.2. Cognitive Science: A Primer. 3.3. Vygotskyan Theory: A Primer. 3.4. Architectures and Contexts: Three Prospects for Unity
- 4. Subjectivity: Consciousness and Metaconsciousness. 4.1. Consciousness Regained. 4.2. From Information Processing to Self-Consciousness. 4.3. The Organization of Subjectivity. 4.4. Vygotskyan Demonstrations of Metaconsciousness
- 5. Control and the Language for Thought. 5.1. The Importance of Reflexivity. 5.2. Defining the Language for Thought. 5.3. The Limits of Private Speech Research. 5.4. A Context-Architecture View of the Language for Thought. 5.5. The Linguistic Structure of the Language for Thought. 5.6. Computational Control and the Symptoms of the Machine Self. 5.7. Run Time and Relativity
- 6. Control Disorders: Splitting the Computational from the Social. 6.1. Logic/Control Dissociations. 6.2. A Catalogue of Control Disorders. 6.3. Logic versus Control. 6.4. Private Speech Disruptions. 6.5. The Metaconscious Effects of Control Disorders. 6.6. Two Final Clarifications. Epilogue: Is Everything Cognitive Science?
- Against Grand Schemes
- Sociocomputationalism
- Two Prospects for Sociocomputationalism
- Does Internalism Win Out?