Some of the papers in this special issue distribute cognition between what is going on inside individual cognizers’ heads and their outside worlds; others distribute cognition among different individual cognizers. Turing’s criterion for cognition was individual, autonomous input/output capacity. It is not clear that distributed cognition could pass the Turing Test
Among the many common criticisms of the Turing test, a valid criticism concerns its scope. Intellige...
This quote/commented critique of Turing's classical paper suggests that Turing meant -- or should ha...
The Turing Test has captured the imagination of the general public due to fundamental questions abou...
Some of the papers in this Special Issue distribute cognition between what is going on inside indivi...
Cognition is thinking; it feels like something to think, and only those who can feel can think. Ther...
Kravchenko (2007) suggests replacing Turing’s suggested method for explaining cognizers’ cognitive c...
The paper traces a pathway through the existing space of argumentation surrounding the original Tur...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
Zenon Pylyshyn cast cognition's lot with computation, stretching the Church/Turing Thesis to its lim...
Turing set the agenda for (what would eventually be called) the cognitive sciences. He said, essenti...
Cognitive science is a form of "reverse engineering" (as Dennett has dubbed it). We are trying to ex...
This paper gives a characterization of distributed cognition (d-cog) and explores ways that the fram...
"Cognizing" (e.g., thinking, understanding, and knowing) is a mental state. Systems without mental s...
Consciousness and intelligence are properties commonly understood as dependent by folk psychology an...
Among the many common criticisms of the Turing test, a valid criticism concerns its scope. Intellige...
This quote/commented critique of Turing's classical paper suggests that Turing meant -- or should ha...
The Turing Test has captured the imagination of the general public due to fundamental questions abou...
Some of the papers in this Special Issue distribute cognition between what is going on inside indivi...
Cognition is thinking; it feels like something to think, and only those who can feel can think. Ther...
Kravchenko (2007) suggests replacing Turing’s suggested method for explaining cognizers’ cognitive c...
The paper traces a pathway through the existing space of argumentation surrounding the original Tur...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
The "easy" problem of cognitive science is explaining how and why we can do what we can do. The "har...
Zenon Pylyshyn cast cognition's lot with computation, stretching the Church/Turing Thesis to its lim...
Turing set the agenda for (what would eventually be called) the cognitive sciences. He said, essenti...
Cognitive science is a form of "reverse engineering" (as Dennett has dubbed it). We are trying to ex...
This paper gives a characterization of distributed cognition (d-cog) and explores ways that the fram...
"Cognizing" (e.g., thinking, understanding, and knowing) is a mental state. Systems without mental s...
Consciousness and intelligence are properties commonly understood as dependent by folk psychology an...
Among the many common criticisms of the Turing test, a valid criticism concerns its scope. Intellige...
This quote/commented critique of Turing's classical paper suggests that Turing meant -- or should ha...
The Turing Test has captured the imagination of the general public due to fundamental questions abou...