Tool use as situated cognition

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 35 (4):245-62 (2012)
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Abstract

Vaesen disregards a plausible alternative to his position, and so fails to offer a compelling argument for unique cognitive mechanisms. We suggest an ecological alternative, according to which divergent relationships between organism and environment, not exotic neuroanatomy, are responsible for unique cognitive capacities. This approach is pertinent to claims about primate cognition; and on this basis, we argue that Vaesen's inference from unique skills to unique mechanisms is unwarranted

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Author Profiles

Bryce Huebner
Georgetown University
Andy Blitzer
Georgetown University

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