Cognitive Models Are Distinguished by Content, Not Format
Patrick Butlin
Abstract
Cognitive scientists often describe the mind as constructing and using models of aspects of the environment, but it is not obvious what makes something a model as opposed to a mere representation. The leading proposal among philosophers is that models are structural representations and are therefore distinguished by their format. However, an alternative conception is suggested by recent work in artificial intelligence, on which models are distinguished by their content. This article outlines the two conceptions and argues for the content conception, against the standard philosophical view.
Topics & Concepts
Content (measure theory)Representation (politics)CognitionEpistemologyComputer scienceCognitive scienceCognitive modelPsychologyPhilosophyMathematicsPolitical sciencePoliticsMathematical analysisNeuroscienceLawEmbodied and Extended CognitionCognitive Science and MappingPhilosophy and Theoretical Science