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Philosophy and Cognitive Science Conceptual Role Semantics Joe Lau PhilosophyHKU.

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Presentation on theme: "Philosophy and Cognitive Science Conceptual Role Semantics Joe Lau PhilosophyHKU."— Presentation transcript:

1 Philosophy and Cognitive Science Conceptual Role Semantics Joe Lau PhilosophyHKU

2 Readings n Robert Cummins u Excerpts on reserve at main office. n Ned Block u Online article. u “Advertisement for a theory of semantics”, on reserve.

3 Topic n Some closely related theories u Conceptual role semantics (CRS) u Computational role semantics u Functional role semantics u Procedural semantics

4 Three questions about a representational system n Which are the representations? n What do the representations mean? n What makes a representation mean what it does?

5 Q1 : Identifying representations n Which physical properties / states / objects are used to encode information / carry meaning? n Which are the symbols? u Information encoded by single neuron in the brain, or groups of neurons? In what form? u Structured? Pictorial? Linguistic?

6 Q2 : What do they mean? n Identifying their content / what the symbols represent. u “insalata” means salad in Spanish. u The firing of this neuron represents the boundary of a surface.

7 Q3 : theory of meaning n Questions that remains even after the meaning of a representation is known. u Given that X means Y, what explains the fact that X means Y? u What is it for something to have a particular meaning?

8 Comparing Q2 and Q3 n Q2 n Specifically about a system of representation. n An empirical question to be resolved by empirical investigations. n Q3 n A general question about the nature of meaning. n A philosophical question about how the concept of representation is to be understood.

9 CRS n A theory of meaning that proposes an answer to the third question. n Better : a very rough and incomplete framework for answering the third question.

10 Intrinsic vs. relational properties n An intrinsic property of X : a property that depends only on those properties internal to X. u Example : the mass of an object n A relational property of X : a property of X that depends on objects that exist externally of X. u Example : being a father

11 Meaning as a relational property n Being meaningful, having a particular meaning are relational properties of representations. u The intrinsic properties of a physical object is not enough to determine its meaning. u The meaning of a representation can change without changing its intrinsic properties.

12 A unitary theory? n Is there one single theory of meaning that applies to : u meaningful expressions in natural languages u meaningful mental representations

13 Meaning as covariation n The meaning of a mental representation X depends on what X covaries with. u X covaries with Y = X causally correlates with Y

14 Example n Hubel and Wiesel : orientation selectivity in the primary visual cortex (area V1) n Activity of cells represent the presence of bars or boundaries at a certain orientation.

15 Criticism n At best : works for “detector” representations that indicate proximate stimulus. u Still : such representations might covary with lots of things. n But not the higher cognitive representations. u Inaccurate covariation u Non-existent covariation

16 Functional role semantics n Functionalism : Mental states are defined by their functional role. u Role vs. occupant u Intentional mental states are defined by (a) type (e.g. belief) and (b) content (e.g. that snow is white) u So the content of intentional mental states are defined and explained by their functional role.

17 Functional role = ??? n A relational property; role within the functional organization of the mind n Conceptual role semantics (CRS) u Content defined by the role of a representation in cognition, e.g. reasoning, decision, perception, memory.

18 Example n Consider these inferential transitions between the beliefs of an agent : u P*Q  P u P*Q  Q u P, Q  P*Q n Interpretation : “*” represents conjunction (“and”). u Meaning determined by role in reasoning.

19 Advantages of CRS n Explain differences in meaning despite sameness of reference. u Lee : “I have a lot of money.” u Lee : “Lee has a lot of money.”

20 Computational-RS n CompRS = CRS + Computationalism n Computionalism : cognition is explained by computations. n Mental content defined by conceptual role  Mental content defined by computational role (role of representation in the mind’s program)

21 CRS and FRS n CRS is one version of FRS u CRS is true  FRS is true u FRS is true not  FRS is true u There might be aspects of functional role which are not computational. n e.g. role in interacting with some non- computational system.

22 CRS and covariation n Internal conceptual role might not determine all aspects of meaning. n External causal connections have a role in determining which particular object a representation is about. Tung-1Tung-2

23 Two factor CRS n Which is more important? Internal or external factor n Is this plausible? u Internal factor imposes constraints on what the representation can be about u External factor determines which particular object or property is represented. u But perhaps some content is determined entirely by the internal factor (e.g. “and”).

24 Narrow vs. wide content n n Narrow content : content that depends only on what is inside the head. n n Wide content : content that depends also on objects outside the head.


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