@misc{cogprints779, volume = {16}, number = {2}, month = {August}, author = {Philip V. Kargopoulos and Andreas Demetriou}, title = {LOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL PARTITIONING OF MIND: DEPICTING THE SAME MAP?}, journal = {New Ideas in Psychology}, pages = {61--88}, year = {1988}, keywords = {cognitive development, domains of mind, logical foundations of cognitive modules, reasoning, specialized structural systems}, url = {http://cogprints.org/779/}, abstract = {The aim of this paper is to demonstrate that empirically delimited structures of mind are also differentiable by means of systematic logical analysis. In the sake of this aim, the paper first summarizes Demetriou's theory of cognitive organization and growth. This theory assumes that the mind is a multistructural entity that develops across three fronts: the processing system that constrains processing potentials, a set of specialized structural systems (SSSs) that guide processing within different reality and knowledge domains, and a hypecognitive system that monitors and controls the functioning of all other systems. In the second part the paper focuses on the SSSs, which are the target of our logical analysis, and it summarizes a series of empirical studies demonstrating their autonomous operation. The third part develops the logical proof showing that each SSS involves a kernel element that cannot be reduced to standard logic or to any other SSS. The implications of this analysis for the general theory of knowledge and cognitive development are discussed in the concluding part of the paper.} }