Summary |
Representations vary along many different dimensions. First, representations can differ in their attitude, or the stance they take towards their content. For example, a belief that p and a desire that p represent the same content, but differ in the attitude they take towards it. Second, representations can differ in their content. Some contents are propositional (or truth-evaluable) while others are non-propositional, and some contents are conceptual (in that certain concepts are needed to entertain the content) while other contents are non-conceptual. Finally, representations can differ in their format, or in how their content is encoded. For example, a mercury thermometer and a digital thermometer can both represent the same content, but they encode that content in different ways. The mercury thermometer is analog while the digital thermometer is digital. Other examples of formats include discursive, pictorial, diagrammatic, and cartographic formats. The entries in this category investigate the dimensions along which representations can vary, and explore the ways in which these dimensions are related to each other. |