The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition (2007)
Alexander Riegler
In: Wallace, B. (ed.) The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism? Imprint: London, pp. 91-115
In summary, the radical constructivist perspective points in the direction of a post-cognitivist psychology which (a) does not get stuck in perceptual overload, (b) does not run into epistemological problems of (propositional) knowledge representation, (c) takes the undifferentiated encoding of nervous signals into consideration, (d) does not exclude animals from being cognitive, and (e) accounts for implicit knowledge.
@inbook{Riegler44,
author = {Riegler A.},
title = {The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition},
year = {2007},
URL = {https://constructivist.info/riegler/44},
editor = {Wallace, B.}
booktitle = {The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism?}
publisher = {Imprint}
place = {London}
pages = {91--115}
}
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%A Riegler A.
%T The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition
%D 2007
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%E Wallace, B.
%B The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism?
%I Imprint
%C London
%P 91-115
%X In summary, the radical constructivist perspective points in the direction of a post-cognitivist psychology which (a) does not get stuck in perceptual overload, (b) does not run into epistemological problems of (propositional) knowledge representation, (c) takes the undifferentiated encoding of nervous signals into consideration, (d) does not exclude animals from being cognitive, and (e) accounts for implicit knowledge.
%2 cognitive science
%2 constructivism
PT - CHAP
A1 - Riegler A.
T1 - The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition
Y1 - 2007
UR - https://constructivist.info/riegler/44
AB - In summary, the radical constructivist perspective points in the direction of a post-cognitivist psychology which (a) does not get stuck in perceptual overload, (b) does not run into epistemological problems of (propositional) knowledge representation, (c) takes the undifferentiated encoding of nervous signals into consideration, (d) does not exclude animals from being cognitive, and (e) accounts for implicit knowledge.
ER -
Riegler A. (2007) The radical constructivist dynamics of cognition. In: Wallace, B. (ed.) The Mind, the Body and the World: Psychology After Cognitivism? Imprint: London, pp. 91–115. Available at https://constructivist.info/riegler/44