Roots of social sensibility and neural function / Jay Schulkin.
2000
BF311 .S385 2000eb
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Title
Roots of social sensibility and neural function / Jay Schulkin.
Author
ISBN
9780262283281 (electronic bk.)
026228328X (electronic bk.)
0262194473
9780262194471
026228328X (electronic bk.)
0262194473
9780262194471
Publication Details
Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2000.
Copyright
©2000
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (xviii, 206 pages) : illustrations
Call Number
BF311 .S385 2000eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
153
Summary
We are social animals, with evolved mechanisms to discern the beliefs and desires of others. This social reason is linked to the concept of intentionality, the ability to attribute beliefs and desires to others. In this book Jay Schulkin explores social reason from philosophical, psychological, and cognitive neuroscientific perspectives. He argues for a pragmatist approach, in which the role of experience--that is, interaction with others--is central to any consideration of action in the social world. Unlike some philosophers of mind, Jay Schulkin considers social reason to be a real feature of the information processing system in the brain, in addition to a useful cognitive tool in predicting behavior. Throughout the book, he incorporates neurobiological evidence for a domain-specific system for social cognition.Topics covered include the centrality of intentional attribution to social cognition, the rise of cognitive science in the twentieth century, the functional argument for the role of experience, intentional understanding in nonhuman primates, theory of mind and natural kinds in children, autism as a disorder of theory of mind, and the integration of emotions into theory of mind.
Note
"A Bradford book."
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Source of Description
OCLC-licensed vendor bibliographic record.
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