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%A Stevan Harnad
%J Language, mind and brain
%T Neoconstructivism: A Unifying Constraint for the Cognitive Sciences
%X Behavioral scientists studied behavior; cognitive scientists study what generates behavior. Cognitive science is hence theoretical behaviorism (or behaviorism is experimental cognitivism). Behavior is data for a cognitive theorist. What counts as a theory of behavior? In this paper, a methodological constraint on theory construction -- "neoconstructivism" -- will be proposed (by analogy with constructivism in mathematics): Cognitive theory must be computable; given an encoding of the input to a behaving system, a theory must be able to compute (an encoding of) its outputs. It is a mistake to conclude, however, that this constraint requires cognitive theory to be computational, or that it follows from this that cognition is computation.
%K cognition, computation, computability, constructivism, theory
%P 1-11
%E T. Simon
%E R. Scholes
%D 1982
%I Hillsdale NJ: Erlbaum
%L cogprints662