Mapping the Mind
Domain Specificity in Cognition and Culture
Susan A Gelman editor Lawrence A Hirschfeld editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:29th Apr '94
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A collection of essays introducing the reader to `domain-specificity'.
Recently, many researchers have concluded that much human thought is `domain-specific'. Thus, the mind is best viewed as a collection of cognitive abilities specialised to handle specific tasks, as opposed to a general problem-solving device which approaches all questions in much the same way. This volume offers a collection of essays exploring how some of these cognitive abilities are organised.What is the nature of human thought? A long dominant view holds that the mind is a general problem-solving device that approaches all questions in much the same way. Chomsky's theory of language, which revolutionised linguistics, challenged this claim, contending that children are primed to acquire some skills, like language, in a manner largely independent of their ability to solve other sorts of apparently similar mental problems. In recent years researchers in anthropology, psychology, linguistic and neuroscience have examined whether other mental skills are similarly independent. Many have concluded that much of human thought is 'domain-specific'. Thus, the mind is better viewed as a collection of cognitive abilities specialised to handle specific tasks than a general problem solver. This volume introduces a general audience to a domain-specificity perspective, by compiling a collection of essays exploring how several of these cognitive abilities are organised.
ISBN: 9780521429931
Dimensions: 233mm x 153mm x 33mm
Weight: 770g
532 pages