Prix bas
CHF104.80
Impression sur demande - l'exemplaire sera recherché pour vous.
This book is the first monograph fully devoted to analyzing the philosophical aspects of affordances. The concept of affordance, coined and developed in the field of ecological psychology, describes the possibilities for action available in the environment. This work offers a systematic approach to the key philosophical features of affordances, such as their ontological characterization, their relation to normative practices, and the idea of agency that follows from viewing affordances as key objects of perception, while also proposing an innovative philosophical characterization of affordances as dispositional properties.
The Philosophy of Affordances analyzes the implications that a proper understanding of affordances has for the philosophy of mind and the cognitive sciences, and aims to intensify the dialogue between philosophy and ecological psychology in which each discipline benefits from the tools and insights of the other.
Explores the key philosophical features of affordances Proposes an innovative philosophical characterization of affordances as dispositional properties Analyzes the implications that a proper understanding of affordances has for the philosophy of mind and the cognitive sciences
Auteur
Manuel Heras-Escribano is a Juan de la Cierva-Formación research fellow working at the IAS Research Centre for Life, Mind, and Society at the University of the Basque Country, Spain. Formerly a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Granada, Spain, and the Alberto Hurtado University, Chile, his work focuses on the philosophical and conceptual aspects of the embodied and situated cognitive sciences, with a growing interest in the evolutionary origins of cognition.
Contenu
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Ecological Psychology.- Chapter 3. The Ontology of Affordances.- Chapter 4. The Normativity of Affordances.- Chapter 5. Towards an Ecological Approach to Agency.- Chapter 6. Ecological Information and Perceptual Content.- Chapter 7. New Challenges for Ecological Psychology.- Chapter 8. Epilogue.