[Xmca-l] Re: How *basic* are images?

Annalisa Aguilar annalisa@unm.edu
Mon Dec 1 21:53:09 PST 2014


Hi Mike,

It was my hope to not post more today, but I I have been denied that wish!

Yes, I am aware that "dcog" and "chat" have important connections. I was not aware however that Don Norman discovered affordances. I learned about Gibson's affordances in Gardner's book The Minds New Science (1985). 

Is there some history that is not part of the common story? 

I looked here for clarity:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affordance

Is it possible that you mean affordances and how they relate to cognitive artifacts? 

There are no rocks here, maybe only Nerf footballs, as done in play, and even joy!

When I am done with Paul's paper I do intend to speak, however until then I will remain with the ineffable.

Kind regards,

Annalisa
________________________________________
From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu> on behalf of mike cole <mcole@ucsd.edu>
Sent: Monday, December 1, 2014 10:39 PM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: How *basic* are images?

The histories of dcog and chat are intertwined, Annalisa. And,
co-incidently, Don Norman discovered affordances and cognitive artifacts
right about that time at UCSD.  If it were possible to find a source that
makes these connections visible and available to read about it might be a
step in the direction of your earlier suggestion of some sort of intro for
newcomers to the discussion.

I have been reading The paper that Paul sent. I fear I need a newcomer's
introduction to many of the dense cluster of thinkers he is seeking to sort
out! The centrality of class comes through clearly, but I am insuficiently
read in too many places to feel I understand well. Help wanted!

A sculptor friend has a t shirt that nails our dilemma "so many rocks, so
little time"!

Mike

A

On Monday, December 1, 2014, Annalisa Aguilar <annalisa@unm.edu> wrote:

> Martin!
>
> Perhaps the day we stop employing the phrase "mental representation" is
> coming closer!
>
> For me, this brings us closer to truly understanding Gibson's theory of
> affordances.
>
> This is what it's like for me to read David's contributed article. But I
> wonder if it is possible for you, Martin, to explain why it is important
> not to use the phrase,"mental representation" in the article.
>
> I suspect there is a history here, and I do not mean to pull a grenade
> pin, I just want to understand because I am a newcomer to the list. If you
> can trust that that is my intention by asking, I will look forward to your
> reply, Martin.
>
> Let me just add that I am putting two and two together that being at UCSD
> and it being the home to Distributed Cognition, that that influences your
> position, not that it necessarily shapes it, but that you find community in
> it (which I suppose can still shape, but it seems more voluntary phrased
> that way).
>
> Kind regards,
>
> Annalisa
> ________________________________________
> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <javascript:;> <
> xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <javascript:;>> on behalf of Martin John
> Packer <mpacker@uniandes.edu.co <javascript:;>>
> Sent: Monday, December 1, 2014 4:28 AM
> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: How *basic* are images?
>
> An interesting article, David. One way in which it is interesting, to me
> at least, is that the phrase "mental representation" is not used, even
> once. Instead the author writes of the way that we "read" images in the
> world around us - material representations - and he tries to define the
> "interpretational space" within which this reading takes place.
>
> Martin
>
> On Dec 1, 2014, at 1:53 AM, David Kellogg <dkellogg60@gmail.com
> <javascript:;>> wrote:
>
> > Larry, Annalisa:
> >
> > People sometimes ask my wife if it was "love at first sight" when we
> > met. She answers--quite truthfully--that she has no memory of anything
> > except the price of the shoes that I wore (a kind of shoe available
> > for a standard price all over China) She does not even remember
> > whether they were new or old (they were pretty new; it was the
> > beginning of the semester). I think I would describe this as a
> > non-image based mental representation.
> >
> > As Larry says, the issue of whether all mental representations are
> > images was a very hot one--back in the late nineteenth century. In
> > fact, it was the key issue for the Gestaltist revolt against Titchener
> > and against Wundtian psychology: for Wundt and his disciples,
> > everything was image based, and the Gestaltists demonstrated that
> > many, if not most, of our mental operations are genetically anterior
> > to images, and have more to do with processes, else we would not have
> > time or ability to process complex problems in real time.
> >
> > I think it is even more true that of forms of thinking that are
> > genetically posterior to images. I hesitate to recommend more reading
> > to anybody, because of course Larry is far more well read than I am
> > (particularly on phenomenology) and Annalisa sometimes feels like
> > she's being sent to sit facing the corner with a book. So do NOT read
> > this article--instead, look at Figure 11.
> >
> > http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157022/
> >
> > The artist, Robert Pepperell, uses the general color structure of
> > Michelangelo’s painting to suggest images without using any actual
> > images: by color and shape, which some part of our cultural experience
> > associates with Renaissance paintings.  Pepperell then deliberately
> > frustrates these guiding images by refusing to give them any
> > recognizable figures upon which to focus.
> >
> > However, the child staring up at Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel fresco
> > for the first time finds himself in the opposite situation. He or she
> > can discern quite clearly the fighting figures in the painting and
> > wonders who they are and why they are fighting, but does not notice
> > the color structure or see anything particularly meaningful in it.
> >
> > David Kellogg
> > Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
> >
> > On 1 December 2014 at 10:39, Annalisa Aguilar <annalisa@unm.edu
> <javascript:;>> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi Larry and David,
> >>
> >> Am I butting in? I hope if I am, it is a welcome butting in!
> >>
> >> I don't know that we can say that "basic guiding images" are at the
> root of all thinking.
> >>
> >> Perhaps it is safer to say that people think differently, based upon
> previous conditioning and interactions with their caretakers, in
> combination with their biological makeup? Vera has a coined a phrase I like
> a lot called "Cognitive pluralism." She has written a paper on it by the
> same title and you may find interesting it if you don't know it.
> >>
> >> With this in mind, it is possible that _some_ people think as Hackett
> describes, but I don't know if it is how all people think. Have you already
> given an example of Hackett's work that you recommend? I'd be willing to
> take a look.
> >>
> >> As I understand, the topic of mental representations is controversial.
> It is likely controversial because no one likes it when someone says "this
> is how all humans think." Of course, that is just my humble observation.
> >>
> >> It may just be that thinking is a dynamic process and whatever that
> process is, is particular to the necessity to the situation at hand? Just a
> thought.
> >>
> >> What is it that appeals to you about this model, metaphoricity?
> >>
> >> (BTW, a metaphor need not be image based!)
> >>
> >> Kind regards,
> >>
> >> Annalisa
> >>
> >>
> >> ________________________________________
> >> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <javascript:;> <
> xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <javascript:;>> on behalf of Larry Purss <
> lpscholar2@gmail.com <javascript:;>>
> >> Sent: Sunday, November 30, 2014 11:33 AM
> >> To: eXtended Mind, Culture Activity
> >> Subject: [Xmca-l]  How *basic* are images?
> >>
> >> David K
> >> I mentioned Chris Hackett, and I recently referenced Peirce. My reason
> for
> >> exploring these authors is I have been following a path pursuing a basic
> >> question.
> >>
> >> Are basic guiding images at the root of all thinking?
> >>
> >> Chris Hackett's answer is: "thinking never EXCEEDS the basic guiding
> images
> >> upon which thinking rests"
> >>
> >> The recent dialogue between Andy and Martin exploring appearances and
> >> illusions was also exploring this theme.
> >>
> >> Hackett is outlining what he understands as a new phenomenological path
> >> that places guiding images at the root of thinking. He names this
> process
> >> *metaphoricity*.
> >>
> >> Hackett believes metaphoricity names the irreducible image-character of
> the
> >> *spontaneous event* of meaning.
> >>
> >> He goes on to suggest that the "intending subject" - which he brackets -
> >> finds itself implicated in this guiding image.
> >>
> >> AND
> >>
> >> it is *in* this guiding image that the *intending subject* finds the
> >> meaning of its very self.
> >>
> >> Exploring the notion of "first things* Hackett proposes this
> >> image-character IS a new *objectivity* that only the notion of metaphor
> can
> >> invoke. In other words the notion of *seeing as* is implicated in
> >> *objectivity*
> >>
> >> This new objectivity for Hackett is the root of thinking.
> >>
> >> Reason at the point of becoming conscious and in command of itself *in*
> the
> >> mode [path] of the concept
> >> occurs AFTER the *constitution* of meaning through guiding images has
> been
> >> established.
> >>
> >> In other words meaning through guiding images mediates the path of
> >> conscious verbal thought in command of itself which is derived from the
> >> image-character of the guiding image.
> >>
> >> I hesitate to open this thread because of how controversial this topic
> may
> >> become [again]
> >>
> >> However I will take the risk as I continue to be held by this basic
> >> question. I want to repeat that Hackett is exploring these images as
> >> occurring as *events* and in his speculations the images emerge
> >> spontaneously prior to intentional consciousness.
> >>
> >> This is not the phenomenology of Husserl [which is transcendental] and
> is
> >> not the phenomenology of Heidegger [which is hermeneutical]. It seems to
> >> have an affinity with Peirce and speculative musings.
> >>
> >> I also realize this question may already be answered in Vygotsky's
> writings
> >> and may be pulling us away from the historical concerns of XMCA. I
> >> personally am following this path for now.
> >>
> >> Larry
> >>
> >
>
>
>
>

--
It is the dilemma of psychology to deal with a natural science with an
object that creates history. Ernst Boesch.



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