@misc{cogprints453,
volume = {12},
number = {2},
title = {Comment on diSessa.},
author = {William J. Clancey},
year = {1994},
pages = {97--102},
journal = {Cognition and Instruction},
keywords = {symbol systems, memory, representations, situated cognition, cognitive modeling},
url = {http://cogprints.org/453/},
abstract = {In the predominant symbolic approach of AI in the 1970s and early 80s, a description?such as an expert system rule, frame, script, or natural language grammar?was often called a "knowledge representation." Knowledge was viewed as something that could be inventoried. Human memory was modeled as a repository of knowledge representations. Arguments that "there are no knowledge representations in the brain," were then misinterpreted in this community as "throwing the baby out with the bathwater."}
}