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Does intelligence result from the manipulation of structured symbolic
expressions? Or is it the result of the activation of large networks
of densely interconnected simple units? Connections and
Symbols provides the first systematic analysis of the explosive
new field of Connectionism that is challenging the basic tenets of
cognitive science.
These lively discussions by Jerry A. Fodor, Zenon W. Pylyshyn, Steven
Pinker, Alan Prince, Joel Lechter, and Thomas G. Bever raise issues
that lie at the core of our understanding of how the mind works: Does
connectionism offer it truly new scientific model or does it merely
cloak the old notion of associationism as a central doctrine of
learning and mental functioning? Which of the new empirical
generalizations are sound and which are false? And which of the many
ideas such as massively parallel processing, distributed
representation, constraint satisfaction, and subsymbolic or
microfeatural analyses belong together, and which are logically
independent?
Now that connectionism has arrived with full-blown models of
psychological processes as diverse as Pavlovian conditioning, visual
recognition, and language acquisition, the debate is on. Common
themes emerge from all the contributors to Connections and
Symbols: criticism of connectionist models applied to language
or the parts of cognition employing language like operations; and a
focus on what it is about human cognition that supports the
traditional physical symbol system hypothesis. While criticizing many
aspects of connectionist models, the authors also identify aspects of
cognition that could he explained by the connectionist models.
Steven Pinker is Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology
and Co-Director of, the Center for Cognitive Science at MIT.
Connections and Symbols is included in the
Cognition Special Issue series, edited by Jacques Mehler.
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