Fr. 140.00

Thinking in Images - Imagistic Cognition and Non-propositional Content

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext How many windows are in your home? One way to answer is to imagine your home and count the windows. Such imagistic thinking abounds in art and science, but how does it work? Thinking in Images answers by arguing images are measuring devices – less like sentences and more like rulers. Informationen zum Autor Piotr Kozak is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Philosophy, University of Bialystok, Poland. Klappentext What does it mean to think with images? There is a well-established tradition of studying thought processes through the nature of language, and we know much more about thinking with language than about thinking with images. Piotr Kozak takes an important step towards rectifying this position. Presenting a unified theory of different types of images, such as diagrams, maps, technical drawings and photographs, Kozak argues that images provide a genuine and autonomous form of content and knowledge. In contrast to the propositional view of thinking and resemblance-based accounts, he puts forward a measurement-theoretic account of images as operations that exemplify measures, revealing the outcomes of measurement operations performed on a depicted situation. Bringing together insights from philosophy of science, picture-theory, cognitive science and cognitive psychology, this book demonstrates that we can only understand what an image is if we truly understand the role they play in our thought processes, challenging the prevailing view that the utility of images is only instrumental and cognitively inferior. Vorwort Demonstrates the critical role images play in our thought processes by arguing that the systematic manipulation of images is a genuine and autonomous form of thinking. Zusammenfassung What does it mean to think with images? There is a well-established tradition of studying thought processes through the nature of language, and we know much more about thinking with language than about thinking with images. Piotr Kozak takes an important step towards rectifying this position.Presenting a unified theory of different types of images, such as diagrams, maps, technical drawings and photographs, Kozak argues that images provide a genuine and autonomous form of content and knowledge. In contrast to the propositional view of thinking and resemblance-based accounts, he puts forward a measurement-theoretic account of images as operations that exemplify measures, revealing the outcomes of measurement operations performed on a depicted situation. Bringing together insights from philosophy of science, picture-theory, cognitive science and cognitive psychology, this book demonstrates that we can only understand what an image is if we truly understand the role they play in our thought processes, challenging the prevailing view that the utility of images is only instrumental and cognitively inferior. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of FiguresAcknowledgmentsIntroduction 1. What is the Problem of Thinking with Images?2. What is Thinking? 3. What Answers Should We Expect?4. What Do Images Do?5. Recognition-based Identification6. What is an Image?7. Thinking with Images8. ConclusionNotesReferencesIndex...

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