Material Engagement Theory (MET), which forms the focus of this special issue, is a relatively new development within cognitive archaeology and anthropology, but one that has important implications for many adjacent fields of research in phenomenology and the cognitive sciences. In How Things Shape the Mind (2013) I offered a detail exposition of the major working hypotheses and the vision of mind that it embodies. Here, introducing this special issue, more than just presenting a broad overview of MET, I seek to enrich and extend that vision and discuss its application to the study of mind and matter. I begin by laying out the philosophical roots, theoretical context and intellectual kinship of MET. Then I offer a basic outline of this theo...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
Taking a psychological and philosophical outlook, we approach making as an embodied and embedded ski...
Humans are organisms of a creative sort. We make new things that scaffold the ecology of our minds, ...
Material Engagement Theory (MET), which forms the focus of this special issue, is a relatively new d...
Material Engagement Theory (MET) is currently driving a conceptual change in the archaeology of mind...
The study of material culture is changing the way we perceive and study the past, as well as how we ...
Humans (not just brains) have been evolving as relational self-conscious beings that undergo situate...
I describe how close attention to the process of sculpting clay from the perspective of Material Eng...
Humans are organisms of a creative sort. We make new things that scaffold the ecology of our minds, ...
How the boundaries of the mind should be drawn with respect to action and the material world is a co...
The emergence of the human mind is a topic that has been of considerable interest to the disciplines...
MET’s goal of ‘taking material culture seriously’ in cognitive archaeology has been met with praise ...
What does it mean to create a beautiful thing? What is the beauty of making? This paper explores the...
For mainstream theories, memory is a skull-bound activity consisting of encoding, storing and retrie...
Recent theoretical and philosophical movements within the study of material culture are more careful...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
Taking a psychological and philosophical outlook, we approach making as an embodied and embedded ski...
Humans are organisms of a creative sort. We make new things that scaffold the ecology of our minds, ...
Material Engagement Theory (MET), which forms the focus of this special issue, is a relatively new d...
Material Engagement Theory (MET) is currently driving a conceptual change in the archaeology of mind...
The study of material culture is changing the way we perceive and study the past, as well as how we ...
Humans (not just brains) have been evolving as relational self-conscious beings that undergo situate...
I describe how close attention to the process of sculpting clay from the perspective of Material Eng...
Humans are organisms of a creative sort. We make new things that scaffold the ecology of our minds, ...
How the boundaries of the mind should be drawn with respect to action and the material world is a co...
The emergence of the human mind is a topic that has been of considerable interest to the disciplines...
MET’s goal of ‘taking material culture seriously’ in cognitive archaeology has been met with praise ...
What does it mean to create a beautiful thing? What is the beauty of making? This paper explores the...
For mainstream theories, memory is a skull-bound activity consisting of encoding, storing and retrie...
Recent theoretical and philosophical movements within the study of material culture are more careful...
We live and we think inside a world of things made and found. Still, psychological science has shown...
Taking a psychological and philosophical outlook, we approach making as an embodied and embedded ski...
Humans are organisms of a creative sort. We make new things that scaffold the ecology of our minds, ...