Litcius/Paper detail

The risk of trivializing affordances: mental and cognitive affordances examined

Miguel Segundo‐Ortin, Manuel Heras-Escribano

2023Philosophical Psychology17 citationsDOI

Abstract

In the last years, we have attended to different attempts to extend the notion of affordance to include mental or cognitive actions. In short, the idea is that our capacity to perform some cognitive functions such as counting, imagining, mathematical reasoning, and so on, is preceded by our awareness of cognitive or mental affordances. In this paper, we analyze two of these attempts, Mental Affordance Hypothesis, and cognitive horizons, and conclude that they fail to deliver their promise. Our argument is two-fold. First, we show that both proposals lack an explanation for how these affordances can be perceived or experienced by the individuals. Second, we argue, focusing on the examples provided by the authors, that the introduction of cognitive affordances is not justified on explanatory grounds. In other words, neither of these proposals offers a compelling justification for thinking that performing said “mental acts” requires the perception of mental or cognitive affordances. Hence, the existence of mental or cognitive affordances remains both scientifically mysterious and explanatorily unjustified.

Topics & Concepts

AffordanceCognitionPerceptionPsychologyArgument (complex analysis)Cognitive psychologyCognitive scienceMental representationMental imageMental activityNeuroscienceBiochemistryChemistryEmbodied and Extended CognitionPhilosophy and History of SciencePsychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment