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Tacit knowledge doesn't explain the results
UnterstĂŒtzendes Argument
1
#3733
Neuroimaging results can't be explained by appeal to tacit knowledge.
Kosslyn and Thompson (2003).
Immediately related elements
How this works
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Artificial Intelligence »
Artificial Intelligence
Artificial IntelligenceâA collaboratively editable version of Robert Horns brilliant and pioneering debate map Can Computers Think?âexploring 50 years of philosophical argument about the possibility of computer thought.âF1CEB7
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Can computers think? [1] »
Can computers think? [1]
Can computers think? [1]âCan a computational system possess all important elements of human thinking or understanding? âFFB597
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No: computers can't understand images [5b] »
No: computers can't understand images [5b]
No: computers can't understand images [5b]âComputers cant think because they cant use images in the way that people do. Computers can only deal with formal symbolic information.â59C6EF
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Images represented by filled cells in an array »
Images represented by filled cells in an array
Images represented by filled cells in an arrayâCells in a matrix inside a machineâs memory function as if they were arranged in a visual array. Images correspond to filled cells within such an array. Array-based sensory patterns are interpreted by higher-level systems. âEF597B
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Images are Quasi-pictorial representations »
Images are Quasi-pictorial representations
Images are Quasi-pictorial representationsâImages are quasi-pictorial entities with special properties that correspond to those of their correlated physical objects. Images possess structure by virtue of their ties to higher-perceptual processes.â98CE71
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Image Psychology »
Image Psychology
Image PsychologyâMembers of the image school of psychology claim that images play an essential role in thinking. â98CE71
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Experimental evidence »
Experimental evidence
Experimental evidenceâKosslyn argues that image psychology is supported by experimental evidence.â98CE71
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Neuroimaging evidence »
Neuroimaging evidence
Neuroimaging evidenceâModern neuroimaging techniques provide new experimental evidence in support of theories of visual mental imageryâsuggesting that explanations based solely on language-descriptions are insufficient.âFF97FF
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Tacit knowledge doesn't explain the results
Tacit knowledge doesn't explain the resultsâNeuroimaging results cant be explained by appeal to tacit knowledge.â98CE71
●
Activation of early visual cortex »
Activation of early visual cortex
Activation of early visual cortexâImagery shouldnt be activated in the early visual cortex if the participants are using propositional representations exlusively when performing imagery experiments.â98CE71
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Participants can't influence brain areas voluntarily »
Participants can't influence brain areas voluntarily
Participants can't influence brain areas voluntarilyâEven if participants were aware of the relevant areas of the brain, they have no way voluntarily to activate a brain area in an attempt to mimic what they believe would happen during perception.â98CE71
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Participants not aware of relevant brain areas »
Participants not aware of relevant brain areas
Participants not aware of relevant brain areasâParticipants do not know which parts of their brains are active when they perform a given task.â98CE71
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Argument undermined by neuroimaging evidence »
Argument undermined by neuroimaging evidence
Argument undermined by neuroimaging evidenceâThe tacit knowledge objection to the behavioural evidence is not supported by the findings from modern neuroimaging studies.âFFFACD
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Eingabe von:
David Price
NodeID:
#3733
Node type:
SupportiveArgument
Eingabedatum (GMT):
11/28/2007 3:29:00 PM
Zuletzt geÀndert am (GMT):
11/28/2007 3:49:00 PM
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