Extended Consciousness and Predictive Processing: A Third Wave View

Front Cover
Routledge, Mar 4, 2019 - Philosophy - 144 pages

In this jointly authored book, Kirchhoff and Kiverstein defend the controversial thesis that phenomenal consciousness is realised by more than just the brain. They argue that the mechanisms and processes that realise phenomenal consciousness can at times extend across brain, body, and the social, material, and cultural world. Kirchhoff and Kiverstein offer a state-of-the-art tour of current arguments for and against extended consciousness. They aim to persuade you that it is possible to develop and defend the thesis of extended consciousness through the increasingly influential predictive processing theory developed in cognitive neuroscience. They show how predictive processing can be given a new reading as part of a third-wave account of the extended mind.

The third-wave claims that the boundaries of mind are not fixed and stable but fragile and hard-won, and always open to negotiation. It calls into question any separation of the biological from the social and cultural when thinking about the boundaries of the mind. Kirchhoff and Kiverstein show how this account of the mind finds support in predictive processing, leading them to a view of phenomenal consciousness as partially realised by patterns of cultural practice.

From inside the book

Contents

List of boxes figures and tables
1986
three waves
1995
From extended mind to extended consciousness?
Extended dynamic singularities models processes
Flexible and openended boundaries Markov blankets
a role for cultural practice
Notes
Extended diachronic constitution predictive processing
Concluding remarks
Index

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About the author (2019)

Michael D. Kirchhoff is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Wollongong, Australia.

Julian Kiverstein is Senior Researcher in Philosophy at the University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

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