In the chapters: Consciousness as process and experiental dimension, Wittgenstein, thought and machine, Rationality and ethical principles in practical reasoning, Knowledge attributed to collectives, Implicit and explicit knowledge of individuals and groups. Those chapters contain the analysis of processual and experiential dimension of consiousness, the criticism of the computer-metaphor of mind, the comparison of individual and collective forms of practical reasoning and the logical analysis of the transition from implicite in explicite knowledge of individuals and groups.
COBISS.SI-ID: 36606818
The paper discusses philosophical questions within the scope of cognitive science. First, three basic approaches are introduced (classical computer modelling, connectionism, embodied cognition), then interdisciplinary connections are critically reconsidered - especially those between psihology and neuroscience, using the decision-making and free will examples. The author warns against inferences about free will and moral responsibility that responsibility that are often too-quickly drawn from neuroscience findings.
COBISS.SI-ID: 38115170