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Title of Journal: Synthese

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Abbravation: Synthese

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Springer Netherlands

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DOI

10.1007/bf02737428

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1573-0964

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Why neuroscience matters to cognitive neuropsychol

Authors: Victoria McGeer
Publish Date: 2007/09/26
Volume: 159, Issue: 3, Pages: 347-
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Abstract

The broad issue in this paper is the relationship between cognitive psychology and neuroscience That issue arises particularly sharply for cognitive neurospsychology some of whose practitioners claim a methodological autonomy for their discipline They hold that behavioural data from neuropsychological impairments are sufficient to justify assumptions about the underlying modular structure of human cognitive architecture as well as to make inferences about its various components But this claim to methodological autonomy can be challenged on both philosophical and empirical grounds A priori considerations about cognitive multiple realisability challenge the thesis on philosophical grounds and neuroscientific findings from developmental disorders substantiate that challenge empirically The conclusion is that behavioural evidence alone is inadequate for scientific progress since appearances of modularity can be thoroughly deceptive obscuring both the dynamic processes of neural development and the endstate network architecture of real cognitive systems


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Other Papers In This Journal:

  1. Foiling the Black Knight
  2. Physicalism and strict implication
  3. Adequate formalization
  4. Desires, beliefs and conditional desirability
  5. Inscrutability and visual objects
  6. Margin for error semantics and signal perception
  7. Sleeping Beauty and Self-location: A Hybrid Model
  8. Phylogenetic inference to the best explanation and the bad lot argument
  9. Against a descriptive vindication of doxastic voluntarism
  10. Epistemic and Dialectical Models of Begging the Question
  11. Parsing the rainbow
  12. Why neuroscience matters to cognitive neuropsychology
  13. Existence problems in philosophy and science
  14. Logic and social interaction: introduction
  15. Similarity and cotenability
  16. Towards a reflexive framework for development: technology transfer after the empirical turn
  17. A triviality result for the “Desire by Necessity” thesis
  18. The ontology of social groups
  19. Which empathy? Limitations in the mirrored “understanding” of emotion
  20. “If you’d wiggled A, then B would’ve changed”
  21. Recognition-primed group decisions via judgement aggregation
  22. A discrete solution for the paradox of Achilles and the tortoise
  23. A foundation for presentism
  24. Externalism and “knowing what” one thinks
  25. Comparative syllogism and counterfactual knowledge
  26. Semantics, conceptual spaces, and the meeting of minds
  27. Inference to the best explanation and mathematical realism
  28. Why follow the royal rule?
  29. Ordering effects, updating effects, and the specter of global skepticism
  30. Evolutionary dynamics of Lewis signaling games: signaling systems vs. partial pooling
  31. Can the new indispensability argument be saved from Euclidean rescues?
  32. Starting from the scenario Euclid–Bolyai–Einstein
  33. Reversing 30 years of discussion: why causal decision theorists should one-box
  34. On denying presuppositions
  35. Remarks on counterpossibles
  36. Knowledge and the norm of assertion: a simple test
  37. Information, possible worlds and the cooptation of scepticism
  38. Levels of communication and lexical semantics
  39. Many entities, no identity
  40. Why Euclid’s geometry brooked no doubt: J. H. Lambert on certainty and the existence of models

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