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Visible Language 33.1: 1999
Cognition, Emotion and Other Inescapable Dimensions of Human Experience

 

Jorge Frascara

 

Contents

Abstract
I:
Cognition and all the rest
a: Guessing as a cognitive strategy
b: Cognition and emotion

c: Cognition and persuasion

II: Method of study

Bibliography

Author Note

 

Abstract

There is an Aristotelic tradition in cognitive psychology, information design and artificial intelligence, to understand human information processing as a mechanism, that is, as a complicated system, ultimately explainable on the basis of the understanding of every one of its multiple components and their interactions. Instead of looking at human information processing as a complicated system, I propose to look at it as a complex system, distinguishing for this paper the complicated from the complex; the first being composed by a high number of discrete parts with many interconnections: as in a computer circuit, the second being an integrated system where everything affects everything: as in the relation between two people. Since I have chosen as my theme the contextualization of cognition with other human factors, I will be dealing with the complex, and I will therefore not attempt to enumerate parts and connections; I will instead concentrate on certain insights about field interactions that I hope will reposition our understanding of mental processes, moving it from an analysis of logical steps to the exploration of the influence that contexts have on human cognitive performance.

 


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