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(2018) Human Studies 41 (1).

The field of consciousness and extended cognition

Sven Arvidson

pp. 21-40

Extended cognition theorists claim that the definition of cognition can be extended to include not only the brain, but also the body and environment. In a series of works, Mark Rowlands has envisioned a new science of mind that explores the externalism of consciousness and cognition. This paper connects Rowlands' work with the phenomenology of Aron Gurwitsch. It shows how Gurwitsch's field of consciousness, in particular his conception of the marginal halo, can provide a distinct, organized way of thinking about extended cognition. A key question considered is from where do cognitive processes project and disclose meanings? By thinking of location as locus—a projecting pathway of points of intentional opportunity—organization in extended cognition becomes organization in a field of consciousness. The marginal halo in the field of consciousness is articulated as this locus of intentionality, what Rowlands (The new science of the mind: from extended mind to embodied phenomenology, MIT Press, Cambridge, 2010) calls "the noneliminable intentional core". Problems of cognitive bloat and personal character are addressed in light of the findings. In addition to situating Gurwitsch's work within the extended mind movement for the first time, this study highlights the importance of the marginal halo, largely neglected in previous Gurwitsch scholarship.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-017-9453-5

Full citation:

Arvidson, (2018). The field of consciousness and extended cognition. Human Studies 41 (1), pp. 21-40.

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