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The Modularity of Mind

The Modularity of Mind

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Stars down to Earth
Review: Fodor usually writes the most arcane books in the cog sci set. The Language of Thought was so opaque that even Hilary Putnam couldn't understand it (circa Language and Learning by Piatelli-Palmarini, ed). This book is written in such a way that even lunkheads such as myself can get it. What he's saying in Psychosemantics I don't know either. But it's nice that he's written one popular philosophy book. When you take this book, together with Stephen Wolfram, you probably get the Language of Thought. When you add Richard Dawkins you get Steven Pinker. Not a bad piece of work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A CLASSIC WORK OF SCHOLARSHIP
Review: Fodor's short book made "faculty psychology" respectable again and has generated a large literature in psychology, philosophy, and linguistics. Fodor offers brilliant arguments that the mind has special-purpose perceptual and linguistic modules. A central thesis of Fodor's book is that these modules are "informationally encapsulated" -- that is, the modules do their work without being able to access the beliefs that the person has. Thus in an important sense perception is theory-neutral, because what you believe will not affect what you see, hear, etc. For a contrasting view, read chapter two of Paul Churchland's Scientific Realism and the Plasticity of Perception. By the way, Fodor's book is brilliant, but don't look for the entertainingly malicious flashes of humor that typify many of his essays.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Locus classicus in philosophy of psychology
Review: This book really set the agenda in thinking about cognitive architecture for many approaches in thinking about the mind during the late 80s and 90s. In some ways, it is philosophical synthesis of concrete gains from research science in linguistics and cognitive psychology. But it also articulates the path down which much recent thinking has gone. The issue of modularity is getting hot now, especially with the business about evolutionary psychology. This and Fodor's _Psychosemantics_ are *the* texts of recent theoretical cognitive science (if you ask me). Oh, and it doesn't have too many obscurely humorous bits designed to confuse you, as some other of his books do.


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