Habits (eBook, PDF)
Pragmatist Approaches from Cognitive Science, Neuroscience, and Social Theory
Redaktion: Caruana, Fausto; Testa, Italo
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Habits (eBook, PDF)
Pragmatist Approaches from Cognitive Science, Neuroscience, and Social Theory
Redaktion: Caruana, Fausto; Testa, Italo
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This pragmatist interpretation of habits provides a unifying concept for 4E cognitive science, neuroscience, philosophy, and social theory.
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This pragmatist interpretation of habits provides a unifying concept for 4E cognitive science, neuroscience, philosophy, and social theory.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108597746
- Artikelnr.: 70914169
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2020
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781108597746
- Artikelnr.: 70914169
Introduction: the pragmatist reappraisal of habit in contemporary cognitive
science, neuroscience, and social theory: introductory essay Italo Testa
and Fausto Caruana; Part I. The Sensorimotor Embodiment of Habits; Section
1. The Neuroscience of Habits: 1. Habit formation, inference and
anticipation: continuour themes in a pragmatist neuroscientific perspective
Jay Schulkin; 2. Habits and self: a temporal view Georg Northoff; Section
2. Habits and Emotions: 3. Emotional Mirroring Promotes Social Bonding and
Social Habits: An Insight from Laughter Fausto Caruana; 4. Emotions,
habits, and skills: action-oriented bodily responses and social affordances
Rebekka Hufendiek; Section 3. Habits and Skills: 5. What the situation
affords: habits and heedful attitudes in skilled performance Katsunori
Miyahara, Tailer G. Ransom and Shaun Gallagher; 6. Swim or sink: habit and
skilful control in sport performance Massimiliano L. Cappuccio and Jesús
Ilundáin-Agurruza; Part II. The Enactment of Habits in Mind and World;
Section 4. Habits and the Background of Action: 7. The backside of habit:
notes on embodied agency and the functional opacity of the medium Maria
Brincker; 8. Habit, ontology, and embodied cognition without borders:
James, Merleau-Ponty, and Nishida Jonathan McKinney, Maki Sato, and Anthony
Chemero; Section 5. Habits, Intentionality, and Language: 9. Clarifying the
character of habits: understanding what and how they explain Daniel D.
Hutto and Ian Robertson; 10. Habits, meaning and intentionality: a Deweyan
reading Pierre Steiner; 11. Language, habit and the future Elena Clare
Cuffari; Section 6. Habits and Moral Life: 12. Moral habit Mark Johnson;
13. Habits of goodness: how we come to be virtuous without moral laws Teed
Rockwell; Part III. Socially Embedded and Culturally Extended Habits;
Section 7. Habits, Human Development, and Social Practices: 14. Growing
minds: pragmatic habits and enculturation Richard Menary; 15. 'Habit is
thus the enormous flywheel of society': pragmatism, social theory, and
cognitive science Stephen Turner; 16. Habit and the human lifespan: toward
a Deweyan account of aging and old age Shannon Sullivan; Section 8. Habits,
Cultural Artifacts, and Aesthetics: 17. Habits and enculturated mind:
pervasive artifacts, predictive processing and expansive habits Joerg
Fingerhut; 18. Brain, body, habit and the performative quality of
aesthetics Vittorio Gallese; Section 9. Habits, Social Ontology, and
Institutions: 19. A habit ontology for cognitive and social sciences:
methodological individualism, pragmatist interactionism, and 4E cogniton
Italo Testa; 20. Social ontology between habits and social interactions
Roberto Frega; 21. Social reproduction, feminism, and Deweyan habit
ontology Fredico Gregoratto and Arvi Särkelä.
science, neuroscience, and social theory: introductory essay Italo Testa
and Fausto Caruana; Part I. The Sensorimotor Embodiment of Habits; Section
1. The Neuroscience of Habits: 1. Habit formation, inference and
anticipation: continuour themes in a pragmatist neuroscientific perspective
Jay Schulkin; 2. Habits and self: a temporal view Georg Northoff; Section
2. Habits and Emotions: 3. Emotional Mirroring Promotes Social Bonding and
Social Habits: An Insight from Laughter Fausto Caruana; 4. Emotions,
habits, and skills: action-oriented bodily responses and social affordances
Rebekka Hufendiek; Section 3. Habits and Skills: 5. What the situation
affords: habits and heedful attitudes in skilled performance Katsunori
Miyahara, Tailer G. Ransom and Shaun Gallagher; 6. Swim or sink: habit and
skilful control in sport performance Massimiliano L. Cappuccio and Jesús
Ilundáin-Agurruza; Part II. The Enactment of Habits in Mind and World;
Section 4. Habits and the Background of Action: 7. The backside of habit:
notes on embodied agency and the functional opacity of the medium Maria
Brincker; 8. Habit, ontology, and embodied cognition without borders:
James, Merleau-Ponty, and Nishida Jonathan McKinney, Maki Sato, and Anthony
Chemero; Section 5. Habits, Intentionality, and Language: 9. Clarifying the
character of habits: understanding what and how they explain Daniel D.
Hutto and Ian Robertson; 10. Habits, meaning and intentionality: a Deweyan
reading Pierre Steiner; 11. Language, habit and the future Elena Clare
Cuffari; Section 6. Habits and Moral Life: 12. Moral habit Mark Johnson;
13. Habits of goodness: how we come to be virtuous without moral laws Teed
Rockwell; Part III. Socially Embedded and Culturally Extended Habits;
Section 7. Habits, Human Development, and Social Practices: 14. Growing
minds: pragmatic habits and enculturation Richard Menary; 15. 'Habit is
thus the enormous flywheel of society': pragmatism, social theory, and
cognitive science Stephen Turner; 16. Habit and the human lifespan: toward
a Deweyan account of aging and old age Shannon Sullivan; Section 8. Habits,
Cultural Artifacts, and Aesthetics: 17. Habits and enculturated mind:
pervasive artifacts, predictive processing and expansive habits Joerg
Fingerhut; 18. Brain, body, habit and the performative quality of
aesthetics Vittorio Gallese; Section 9. Habits, Social Ontology, and
Institutions: 19. A habit ontology for cognitive and social sciences:
methodological individualism, pragmatist interactionism, and 4E cogniton
Italo Testa; 20. Social ontology between habits and social interactions
Roberto Frega; 21. Social reproduction, feminism, and Deweyan habit
ontology Fredico Gregoratto and Arvi Särkelä.
Introduction: the pragmatist reappraisal of habit in contemporary cognitive
science, neuroscience, and social theory: introductory essay Italo Testa
and Fausto Caruana; Part I. The Sensorimotor Embodiment of Habits; Section
1. The Neuroscience of Habits: 1. Habit formation, inference and
anticipation: continuour themes in a pragmatist neuroscientific perspective
Jay Schulkin; 2. Habits and self: a temporal view Georg Northoff; Section
2. Habits and Emotions: 3. Emotional Mirroring Promotes Social Bonding and
Social Habits: An Insight from Laughter Fausto Caruana; 4. Emotions,
habits, and skills: action-oriented bodily responses and social affordances
Rebekka Hufendiek; Section 3. Habits and Skills: 5. What the situation
affords: habits and heedful attitudes in skilled performance Katsunori
Miyahara, Tailer G. Ransom and Shaun Gallagher; 6. Swim or sink: habit and
skilful control in sport performance Massimiliano L. Cappuccio and Jesús
Ilundáin-Agurruza; Part II. The Enactment of Habits in Mind and World;
Section 4. Habits and the Background of Action: 7. The backside of habit:
notes on embodied agency and the functional opacity of the medium Maria
Brincker; 8. Habit, ontology, and embodied cognition without borders:
James, Merleau-Ponty, and Nishida Jonathan McKinney, Maki Sato, and Anthony
Chemero; Section 5. Habits, Intentionality, and Language: 9. Clarifying the
character of habits: understanding what and how they explain Daniel D.
Hutto and Ian Robertson; 10. Habits, meaning and intentionality: a Deweyan
reading Pierre Steiner; 11. Language, habit and the future Elena Clare
Cuffari; Section 6. Habits and Moral Life: 12. Moral habit Mark Johnson;
13. Habits of goodness: how we come to be virtuous without moral laws Teed
Rockwell; Part III. Socially Embedded and Culturally Extended Habits;
Section 7. Habits, Human Development, and Social Practices: 14. Growing
minds: pragmatic habits and enculturation Richard Menary; 15. 'Habit is
thus the enormous flywheel of society': pragmatism, social theory, and
cognitive science Stephen Turner; 16. Habit and the human lifespan: toward
a Deweyan account of aging and old age Shannon Sullivan; Section 8. Habits,
Cultural Artifacts, and Aesthetics: 17. Habits and enculturated mind:
pervasive artifacts, predictive processing and expansive habits Joerg
Fingerhut; 18. Brain, body, habit and the performative quality of
aesthetics Vittorio Gallese; Section 9. Habits, Social Ontology, and
Institutions: 19. A habit ontology for cognitive and social sciences:
methodological individualism, pragmatist interactionism, and 4E cogniton
Italo Testa; 20. Social ontology between habits and social interactions
Roberto Frega; 21. Social reproduction, feminism, and Deweyan habit
ontology Fredico Gregoratto and Arvi Särkelä.
science, neuroscience, and social theory: introductory essay Italo Testa
and Fausto Caruana; Part I. The Sensorimotor Embodiment of Habits; Section
1. The Neuroscience of Habits: 1. Habit formation, inference and
anticipation: continuour themes in a pragmatist neuroscientific perspective
Jay Schulkin; 2. Habits and self: a temporal view Georg Northoff; Section
2. Habits and Emotions: 3. Emotional Mirroring Promotes Social Bonding and
Social Habits: An Insight from Laughter Fausto Caruana; 4. Emotions,
habits, and skills: action-oriented bodily responses and social affordances
Rebekka Hufendiek; Section 3. Habits and Skills: 5. What the situation
affords: habits and heedful attitudes in skilled performance Katsunori
Miyahara, Tailer G. Ransom and Shaun Gallagher; 6. Swim or sink: habit and
skilful control in sport performance Massimiliano L. Cappuccio and Jesús
Ilundáin-Agurruza; Part II. The Enactment of Habits in Mind and World;
Section 4. Habits and the Background of Action: 7. The backside of habit:
notes on embodied agency and the functional opacity of the medium Maria
Brincker; 8. Habit, ontology, and embodied cognition without borders:
James, Merleau-Ponty, and Nishida Jonathan McKinney, Maki Sato, and Anthony
Chemero; Section 5. Habits, Intentionality, and Language: 9. Clarifying the
character of habits: understanding what and how they explain Daniel D.
Hutto and Ian Robertson; 10. Habits, meaning and intentionality: a Deweyan
reading Pierre Steiner; 11. Language, habit and the future Elena Clare
Cuffari; Section 6. Habits and Moral Life: 12. Moral habit Mark Johnson;
13. Habits of goodness: how we come to be virtuous without moral laws Teed
Rockwell; Part III. Socially Embedded and Culturally Extended Habits;
Section 7. Habits, Human Development, and Social Practices: 14. Growing
minds: pragmatic habits and enculturation Richard Menary; 15. 'Habit is
thus the enormous flywheel of society': pragmatism, social theory, and
cognitive science Stephen Turner; 16. Habit and the human lifespan: toward
a Deweyan account of aging and old age Shannon Sullivan; Section 8. Habits,
Cultural Artifacts, and Aesthetics: 17. Habits and enculturated mind:
pervasive artifacts, predictive processing and expansive habits Joerg
Fingerhut; 18. Brain, body, habit and the performative quality of
aesthetics Vittorio Gallese; Section 9. Habits, Social Ontology, and
Institutions: 19. A habit ontology for cognitive and social sciences:
methodological individualism, pragmatist interactionism, and 4E cogniton
Italo Testa; 20. Social ontology between habits and social interactions
Roberto Frega; 21. Social reproduction, feminism, and Deweyan habit
ontology Fredico Gregoratto and Arvi Särkelä.