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In this engaging book, Jerry Fodor argues against the widely held view
that mental processes are largely computations, that the architecture
of cognition is massively modular, and that the explanation of our
innate mental structure is basically Darwinian. Although Fodor has
praised the computational theory of mind as the best theory of
cognition that we have got, he considers it to be only a fragment of
the truth. In fact, he claims, cognitive scientists do not really know
much yet about how the mind works (the book's title refers to Steve
Pinker's How the Mind Works).
Fodor's primary aim is to explore the relationship among computational
and modular theories of mind, nativism, and evolutionary
psychology. Along the way, he explains how Chomsky's version of
nativism differs from that of the widely received New Synthesis
approach. He concludes that although we have no grounds to suppose
that most of the mind is modular, we have no idea how nonmodular
cognition could work. Thus, according to Fodor, cognitive science has
hardly gotten started.
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