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A pluralistic approach to distributed cognition: tasks, mechanisms, and practices

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posted on 2022-03-28, 19:32 authored by Alexander James Gillett
This thesis is a conceptual re-analysis of distributed cognition. I defend the position against numerous challenges and propose a novel pluralistic approach. Distributed cognition is a research framework used in many differing fields within the sciences and humanities. It proposes that the unit of analysis for exploring human cognition is flexible, and that cognition is distributed across both time and space in multiple ways (Hutchins 2001). But the stunning variety of putative cases in the literature raises a multitude of questions about whether this concept is being applied coherently. The heterogeneity of size and type of distributed cognitive systems also exacerbates the problem of cognitive bloat. I argue that standard simpler approaches to these problems are inadequate because they fail to account for the importance of cognition distributed in time. As such, I propose a pluralistic approach that combines a number of naturalistic criteria from the literature: task-specificity (Davies & Michaelian 2016), the mutual manipulability criterion (Kaplan 2012), and normative patterned practices (Menary 2007a, 2016). These principles work in conjunction with each other in a consilient fashion to tackle the myriad problems facing a proponent of distributed cognition – as well as mitigating a further problem I call ‘methodological bloat’. My pluralistic framework also provides a robust and useful framework that is suitable for both theoretical and practical purposes: i.e. it not only provides us with a principled means of designating what distributed cognition is, it also shows how exploring distributed cognition in specific case studies can lead to insights about human cognition “in the wild”. I demonstrate these points with reference to the specific details of case studies – particularly Hutchins’ (1995a) seminal navigation team. This allows me to show that my pluralistic approach is not only superior to simpler approaches to distributed cognition but also provides insights that are of note to methodological individualists.

History

Table of Contents

General introduction -- 1. The problems of distributed cognition -- 2. The navigation team and information bottlenecks -- 3. Task-specificity and multilevel analysis -- 4. The mutual manipulability criterion -- 5.Normative patterned practices -- 6. Re-examining the navigation case study -- General conclusion -- Bibliography.

Notes

Theoretical thesis. Bibliography: pages 253-282

Awarding Institution

Macquarie University

Degree Type

Thesis PhD

Degree

PhD, Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts, Department of Philosophy

Department, Centre or School

Department of Philosophy

Year of Award

2017

Principal Supervisor

Richard Menary

Additional Supervisor 1

Albert Atkin

Additional Supervisor 2

Richard Heersmink

Rights

Copyright Alexander James Gillett 2017. Copyright disclaimer: http://mq.edu.au/library/copyright

Language

English

Extent

1 online resource (viii, 282 pages) diagrams

Former Identifiers

mq:70621 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1266067