مخلوقات متشابكة .. علم الإدراك المجسد للذات والآخر
مخلوقات متشابكة .. علم الإدراك المجسد للذات والآخر
Interwoven Creatures...The Science of Embodied Cognition of Self and Other In one common view, the mind is viewed as immaterial, internal, and invisible. From this perspective, the mind is inherently individual and isolated: it is unknowable from the outside, separated from the world and from the minds of others. Anthony Chimero, a philosopher and cognitive scientist, offers a powerful challenge to this theory. By combining philosophical insights with empirical data, he develops a new understanding of the mind centered on embodiment and social interaction. According to Chimeru, the mind is intertwined with the world: it depends on the body, the surrounding environment, and the people with whom the individual interacts. It shows that the latest research in cognitive science provides striking empirical evidence supporting the concept of the interconnected self. Chimero explores the philosophical, ethical, and political implications of the claim that the self is necessarily entangled with the world and with others, and links this to phenomenology, critical theory, and feminist political theory. Deeply interdisciplinary and engagingly written, Entangled Creatures makes a compelling case for viewing the self as social—particularly in the age of artificial intelligence—with radical consequences for ethics and politics.

Bibliographic Data
| Publisher | Columbia University Press |
|---|---|
| Publisher Address | ips@ingramcontent.com |
| Country | USA |
| Primary Category | Philosophies and Cultures |
| Language | Arabic (AR) |
| Translation | Translated |












