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TY - INPR
ID - cogprints6182
UR - http://cogprints.org/6182/
A1 - Dror, Itiel
A1 - Harnad, Stevan
Y1 - 2008/08/30/
N2 - "Cognizing" (e.g., thinking, understanding, and knowing) is a mental state. Systems without mental states, such as cognitive technology, can sometimes contribute to human cognition, but that does not make them cognizers. Cognizers can offload some of their cognitive functions onto cognitive technology, thereby extending their performance capacity beyond the limits of their own brain power. Language itself is a form of cognitive technology that allows cognizers to offload some of their cognitive functions onto the brains of other cognizers. Language also extends cognizers' individual and joint performance powers, distributing the load through interactive and collaborative cognition. Reading, writing, print, telecommunications and computing further extend cognizers' capacities. And now the web, with its network of cognizers, digital databases and software agents, all accessible anytime, anywhere, has become our ?Cognitive Commons,? in which distributed cognizers and cognitive technology can interoperate globally with a speed, scope and degree of interactivity inconceivable through local individual cognition alone. And as with language, the cognitive tool par excellence, such technological changes are not merely instrumental and quantitative: they can have profound effects on how we think and encode information, on how we communicate with one another, on our mental states, and on our very nature.
PB - John Benjamins
KW - distributed cognition
KW - cognitive technology
KW - Cognitive Commons
KW - Turing Test
KW - Robotics
KW - Internet
KW - consciousness
TI - Offloading Cognition onto Cognitive Technology
AV - public
ER -