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Common minds, uncommon thoughts: a philosophical anthropological investigation of uniquely human creative behavior, with an emphasis on artistic ability, religious reflection, and scientific study

机译:共同的思想,不寻常的思想:对独特的人类创造行为的哲学人类学研究,强调艺术能力,宗教反思和科学研究

摘要

The aim of this dissertation is to create a naturalistic philosophical picture of creative capacities that are specific to our species, focusing on artistic ability, religious reflection, and scientific study. By integrating data from diverse domains (evolutionary and developmental psychology, cognitive anthropology and archeology, neuroscience) within a philosophical anthropological framework, I have presented a cognitive and evolutionary approach to the question of why humans, but not other animals engage in such activities. Through an application of cognitive and evolutionary perspectives to the study of these behaviors, I have sought to provide a more solid footing for philosophical anthropological discussions of uniquely human behavior. In particular, I have argued that art, religion and science, which are usually seen as achievements that are quite remote from ordinary modes of reasoning, are subserved by evolved cognitive processes that serve functions in everyday cognitive tasks, that arise early and spontaneously in cognitive development, that are shared cross-culturally, and that have evolved in response to selective pressures in our ancestral past. These mundane cognitive processes provide a measuring rod with which we can assess a diversity of cultural phenomena; they form a unified explanatory framework to approach human culture. I have argued that we can explain uncommon thoughts (exceptional human achievements, such as art, religion and science) in terms of interactions between common minds (ordinary human minds that share their knowledge through cultural transmission). This dissertation is subdivided into four parts. Part I outlines the problem of human uniqueness, examining theories on how humans conceptualize the world, and what their mental tool box looks like. Part II discusses the evolutionary and cognitive origins of human artistic behavior. Part III focuses on the cognitive science of religion, especially on how it can be applied to the reasoning of theologians and philosophers of religion. Part IV considers the cognitive basis of scientific practice.
机译:本论文的目的是创造一种自然的哲学图景,说明我们物种特有的创造力,重点是艺术能力,宗教反思和科学研究。通过在哲学人类学框架内整合来自不同领域(进化和发展心理学,认知人类学和考古学,神经科学)的数据,我提出了一种认知和进化的方法来解决为什么人类而不是其他动物参与这种活动的问题。通过将认知和进化的观点应用到这些行为的研究中,我力求为独特的人类行为的哲学人类学讨论提供更坚实的基础。我特别指出,艺术,宗教和科学通常被视为与普通推理模式相距甚远的成就,但它们却由进化的认知过程所服务,这些过程在日常的认知任务中发挥作用,这些过程在认知的早期和自发地出现。发展,这是跨文化共享的,并且随着我们祖先过去的选择压力而发展。这些平凡的认知过程提供了一个量尺,通过它我们可以评估各种文化现象。它们形成了一个统一的解释框架来处理人类文化。我认为我们可以用共同思想(通过文化传播共享知识的共同人类思想)之间的相互作用来解释罕见思想(人类的杰出成就,例如艺术,宗教和科学)。本文共分为四个部分。第一部分概述了人类唯一性的问题,研究了有关人类如何概念化世界以及其心理工具箱是什么样的理论。第二部分讨论了人类艺术行为的演变和认知起源。第三部分侧重于宗教的认知科学,特别是如何将其应用于宗教神学家和哲学家的推理。第四部分考虑了科学实践的认知基础。

著录项

  • 作者

    De Smedt Johan;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2011
  • 总页数
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 入库时间 2022-08-20 21:01:14

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