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{{Short description|Philosophical concept}}
{{Merge from|Enaction (philosophy)|discuss=Talk:Enactivism#Merge discussion|date=April 2014}}
{{Over-quotation|date=September 2022}}'''Enactivism''' is a position in ] that argues that ] arises through a dynamic interaction between an acting ] and its environment.<ref name="Evan Thompson"/> It claims that the environment of an organism is brought about, or enacted, by the active exercise of that organism's sensorimotor processes. "The key point, then, is that the species brings forth and specifies its own domain of problems ...this domain does not exist "out there" in an environment that acts as a landing pad for organisms that somehow drop or parachute into the world. Instead, living beings and their environments stand in relation to each other through mutual specification or codetermination" (p.&nbsp;198).<ref name=Varela/> "Organisms do not passively receive information from their environments, which they then translate into internal representations. Natural cognitive systems...participate in the generation of meaning ...engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions: ''they enact a world''."<ref name=Jaegher1/> These authors suggest that the increasing emphasis upon enactive terminology presages a new era in thinking about cognitive science.<ref name=Jaegher1/> How the actions involved in enactivism relate to age-old questions about ] remains a topic of active debate.<ref name=Manetti/>


The term 'enactivism' is close in meaning to 'enaction', defined as "the manner in which a subject of perception creatively matches its actions to the requirements of its situation".<ref name=Tascano0/> The introduction of the term ''enaction'' in this context is attributed to ], ], and ] in ''The Embodied Mind'' (1991),<ref name=Tascano0/><ref name=RWilson/> who proposed the name to "emphasize the growing conviction that cognition is not the representation of a pre-given world by a pre-given mind but is rather the enactment of a world and a mind on the basis of a history of the variety of actions that a being in the world performs".<ref name=Varela/> This was further developed by Thompson and others,<ref name="Evan Thompson"/> to place emphasis upon the idea that experience of the world is a result of mutual interaction between the sensorimotor capacities of the organism and its environment.<ref name=RWilson/> However, some writers maintain that there remains a need for some degree of the mediating function of representation in this new approach to the science of the mind.<ref name="Rowlands"/>
'''Enactivism''' argues that cognition depends on a dynamic interaction between the cognitive agent and its environment: "Organisms do not passively receive information from their environments, which they then translate into internal representations. Natural cognitive systems...participate in the generation of meaning ...engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions: ''they enact a world''.<ref>{{cite book |author=Ezequiel A Di Paolo, Marieke Rhohde, Hanne De Jaegher |chapter=Horizons for the inactive mind: Values, social interaction, and play |title=Enaction: Toward a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science |editor=John Stewart, Oliver Gapenne, Ezequiel A Di Paolo, eds |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=UtFDJx-gysQC&pg=PA39 |pages=33 ''ff'' |isbn= 978-0262526012 |publisher=MIT Press |year=2014}}</ref>


The initial emphasis of enactivism upon sensorimotor skills has been criticized as "cognitively marginal",<ref name=ClarkA/> but it has been extended to apply to higher level cognitive activities, such as social interactions.<ref name="Jaegher1"/> "In the enactive view,... knowledge is constructed: it is constructed by an agent through its sensorimotor interactions with its environment, co-constructed between and within living species through their meaningful interaction with each other. In its most abstract form, knowledge is co-constructed between human individuals in socio-linguistic interactions...Science is a particular form of social knowledge construction... allows us to perceive and predict events beyond our immediate cognitive grasp...and also to construct further, even more powerful scientific knowledge."<ref name=Rohde/>
The introduction of the term ''enaction'' in this context is attributed to ], ], and ],<ref name=RWilson>{{cite web |author=Robert A Wilson, Lucia Foglia |title=Embodied Cognition: §2.2 Enactive cognition |work=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2011 Edition) |editor=Edward N. Zalta, ed |url = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/fall2011/entries/embodied-cognition/#EnaCog |date=July 25, 2011}}</ref> who proposed the name to "emphasise the growing conviction that cognition is not the representation of a pre given world by a pre given mind but is rather the enactment of a world and a mind on the basis of a history of the variety of actions that a being in the world performs".<ref name=Varela>{{cite book |title=The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience |author=Francisco J Varela, Evan Thompson, Eleanor Rosch |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=QY4RoH2z5DoC&printsec=frontcover |year=1992 |publisher=MIT Press |page=9 |quote= |isbn=978-0262261234}}</ref> This was further developed by Thompson and others,<ref>{{cite book |title=Mind in life:Biology, phenomenology, and the sciences of mind |author=Evan Thompson |url=http://lchc.ucsd.edu/MCA/Mail/xmcamail.2012_03.dir/pdf3okBxYPBXw.pdf |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn= 978-0674057517 |chapter=Chapter 1: The inactive approach |year=2010}}
</ref> to place emphasis upon the idea that experience of the world is a result of mutual interaction between the sensorimotor capacities of the organism and its environment.<ref name=RWilson/>


Enactivism is closely related to ] and ], and is presented as an alternative to ], ], and ].
The initial emphasis of enactivism upon sensorimotor skills has been criticized as "cognitively marginal",<ref>{{cite journal |author=Andy Clark, Josefa Toribio |title=Doing without representing |journal =Synthese |volume=101 |pages=401–434 |year=1994 |url=http://www.philosophy.ed.ac.uk/people/clark/pubs/DoingW-O-rep.pdf}}
</ref> but it has been extended to apply to higher level cognitive activities, such as social interactions.<ref>{{cite book |author=Ezequiel A Di Paolo, Marieke Rhohde, Hanne De Jaegher |chapter=Horizons for the enactive mind: Values, social interaction, and play |title=Enaction: Toward a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science |editor=John Stewart, Oliver Gapenne, Ezequiel A Di Paolo, eds |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=UtFDJx-gysQC&pg=PA39 |pages=33 ''ff'' |isbn= 978-0262526012 |publisher=MIT Press |year=2014}}</ref> "In the enactive view,... knowledge is constructed: it is constructed by an agent through its sensorimotor interactions with ts environment, co-constructed between and within living species through their meaningful interaction with each other. In its most abstract form, knowledge is co-constructed between human individuals in socio-linguistic interactions...Science is a particular form of social knowledge construction... allows us to perceive and predict events beyond our immediate cognitive grasp...and also to construct further, even more powerful scientific knowledge."<ref>{{cite book |title=Enaction, Embodiment, Evolutionary Robotics: Simulation Models for a Post-Cognitivist Science of Mind |chapter= §3.1 The scientist as observing subject |pages=30 ''ff'' |author=Marieke Rohde |isbn=978-9078677239 |publisher=Atlantis Press |year=2010 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=LlpZjLMPiHYC&pg=PA30}}</ref>


==Philosophical aspects<!--'Enaction (philosophy)' redirects here-->==
Enactivism is closely related to ] and ], and is presented as an alternative to ], ] and ].


Enactivism is one of a cluster of related theories sometimes known as the ''4Es''.<ref name=Gallagher/> As described by ], mental processes are:
==Philosophical aspects==
* '''Embodied''' involving more than the brain, including a more general involvement of bodily structures and processes.
Research is ongoing <ref name=Torrance>
* '''Embedded''' functioning only in a related external environment.
{{cite journal |author=Steve Torrance |title=In search of the enactive: Introduction to special issue on Enactive Experience |journal=Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences |volume=4 |issue=4 |date=December 2005 |pages=357-368 |url=http://pagesperso.lina.univ-nantes.fr/~prie-y/archives/ENACTION-SCHOOLS/docs/documents2007/enaction07-torrance-In-search-of-the-Enactive-PCS-dec05.pdf}}</ref> into how perception and action combine to allow us to perceive, and to have consciousness.<ref name=Varela/> Some authors are beginning to believe that perception has active elements, or even is itself an active intervention in the world.<ref name=Noe>
* '''Enacted''' involving not only neural processes, but also things an organism ''does''.
{{cite book |author=Alva Noë |title= Action in Perception |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=kFKvU2hPhxEC&pg=PA1 |pages=1 ''ff'' |chapter=Chapter 1: The enactive approach to perception: An introduction |isbn=9780262140881 |year=2004 |publisher=MIT Press}}
* '''Extended''' into the organism's environment.
</ref> This is seen as a progressing of the phenomenological approach of ],<ref name=Baldwin>
{{cite book |author=Thomas Baldwin |title=]: Basic Writings |isbn=9780810101647 |chapter=Part One: Merleau-Ponty's prospectus of his work |pages=33 ''ff'' |quote=I have tried against doctrines which treat perception as a simple result of the action of external things on our body as well as against those which insist on the autonomy of consciousness. These philosophies commonly forget - in favor of a pure exteriority or or a pure interiority - the insertion of the mind in corporeality...|isbn=978-0415315869 |year=2003 |publisher=Routledge}}
</ref> while resolving debates centered on ] of mind/matter.<ref name=Thompson>
{{cite journal |author=] |year=2001 |title=Empathy and consciousness |journal=Journal of Consciousness Studies |volume=8 |issue=5-7 |pages= 1-32 |url=http://www.imprint.co.uk/pdf/Thompson.pdf |quote=The theme of this article is that the individual human mind is not confined within the
head, but extends throughout the living body and includes the world beyond the
biological membrane of the organism, especially the interpersonal, social world of
self and other.}}
</ref>


Enactivism proposes an alternative to ] as a philosophy of mind, in that it emphasises the interactions between mind, body and the environment, seeing them all as inseparably intertwined in mental processes.<ref name=EThompson/> The self arises as part of the process of an embodied entity interacting with the environment in precise ways determined by its physiology. In this sense, individuals can be seen to "grow into" or arise from their interactive role with the world.<ref name=Burman/>
:"Enactivists criticize ] views of the mind and emphasize the importance of ] and ] to ]."
:"Enaction is the idea that organisms create their own experience through their actions. Organisms are not passive receivers of input from the environment, but are actors in the environment such that what they experience is shaped by how they act."<ref name=Hutchins/>
::-], while with Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto.<ref name=Thompson2>
From promotional blurb for {{cite book |title=Radical Enactivism: Focus on the philosophy of Daniel D. Hutto |editor=Richard Menary |url=https://benjamins.com/#catalog/books/ceb.2/quotes |isbn=9789027241511}}
</ref>


In ''The Tree of Knowledge'' Maturana & Varela proposed the term ''enactive''<ref name=Maturana/> "to evoke the view of knowledge that what is known is brought forth, in contraposition to the more classical views of either cognitivism<ref group=Note name=Cognitivism/> or connectionism.<ref group=Note name=Connectionism/> They see enactivism as providing a middle ground between the two extremes of ] and ]. They seek to "confront the problem of understanding how our existence-the ] of our living- is coupled to a surrounding world which appears filled with regularities that are at every instant the result of our biological and social histories.... to find a ''via media'': to understand the regularity of the world we are experiencing at every moment, but without any point of reference independent of ourselves that would give certainty to our descriptions and cognitive assertions. Indeed the whole mechanism of generating ourselves, as describers and observers tells us that our world, as the world which we bring forth in our coexistence with others, will always have precisely that mixture of regularity and mutability, that combination of solidity and shifting sand, so typical of human experience when we look at it up close." Another important notion relating to enactivism is autopoiesis. The word refers to a system that is able to reproduce and maintain itself. Maturana & Varela describe that "This was a word without a history, a word that could directly mean what takes place in the dynamics of the autonomy proper to living systems"<ref name="Maturana, Humberto R., 1928–1980">{{Cite book|last1=Maturana|first1=Humberto R.|last2=Varela|first2=Francisco|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/5726379|title=Autopoiesis and cognition : the realization of the living|date=1980|publisher=D. Reidel Pub. Co.|isbn=90-277-1015-5|location=Dordrecht, Holland|oclc=5726379}}</ref> Using the term autopoiesis, they argue that any closed system that has autonomy, self-reference and self-construction (or, that has autopoietic activities) has cognitive capacities. Therefore, cognition is present in all living systems.<ref name="Maturana, Humberto R., 1928–1980"/> This view is also called autopoietic enactivism.
At a fundamental level, enactivism is anti-]. The self arises as part of the process of an embodied entity interacting with the environment in precise ways determined by its physiology. In this sense, individuals can be seen to "grow into" or arise from,<ref>Burman, J. T. (2006). , ''Journal of Consciousness Studies, 13''(12), pp. 115-119. </ref> their interactive role with the world. The self does not represent the world, but produces it through the nature of its unique way of interacting with its environment, stated the authors of ''The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience''.<ref>{{cite book |title=The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience |author=Francisco J Varela, Evan Thompson, Eleanor Rosch |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=QY4RoH2z5DoC&printsec=frontcover |year=1992 |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=978-0262261234}}</ref>


Radical enactivism is another form of enactivist view of cognition. Radical enactivists often adopt a thoroughly non-representational, enactive account of basic cognition. Basic cognitive capacities mentioned by Hutto and Myin include perceiving, imagining and remembering.<ref name="Hutto, Daniel D">{{Cite book|last1=Hutto|first1=Daniel D.|last2=Myin|first2=Erik|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/988028776|title=Evolving enactivism: basic minds meet content|isbn=978-0-262-33977-3|location=Cambridge, MA|oclc=988028776}}</ref><ref name="Schlicht">{{Cite journal|last1=Schlicht|first1=Tobias|last2=Starzak|first2=Tobias|date=2019-09-07|title=Prospects of enactivist approaches to intentionality and cognition|url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11229-019-02361-z|journal=Synthese|volume=198|pages=89–113|language=en|doi=10.1007/s11229-019-02361-z|s2cid=201868153|issn=0039-7857}}</ref> They argue that those forms of basic cognition can be explained without positing mental representations. With regard to complex forms of cognition such as language, they think mental representations are needed, because there needs explanations of content. In human being's public practices, they claim that "such intersubjective practices and sensitivity to the relevant norms comes with the mastery of the use of public symbol systems" (2017, p.&nbsp;120), and so "as it happens, this appears only to have occurred in full form with construction of sociocultural cognitive niches in the human lineage" (2017, p.&nbsp;134).<ref name="Hutto, Daniel D"/> They conclude that basic cognition as well as cognition in simple organisms such as bacteria are best characterized as non-representational.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Hutto|first1=Daniel D.|last2=Myin|first2=Erik|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/822894365|title=Radicalizing enactivism : basic minds without content|date=2013|publisher=MIT Press|isbn=978-0-262-31217-2|location=Cambridge, Mass.|oclc=822894365}}</ref><ref name="Hutto, Daniel D"/><ref name="Schlicht"/>
], in ''The Tree of Knowledge''<ref name=Maturana>
{{cite book |author=Humberto R Maturana & Francisco J Varela |year=1992 |title= The tree of knowledge: the biological roots of human understanding |edition=Revised |publisher=Shambhala Publications Inc |chapter=Afterword |page=255 |isbn=978-0877736424}}
</ref> proposed "the term ''enactive'' to designate this view of knowledge, to evoke the view that what is known is brought forth, in contraposition to the more classical views of either cognitivism or connectionism." Within the book, the analogy is made with '']'' (the impossibility of explaining cognitive phenomena based upon a world of objects on one side and the chaos of nonobjectivity on the other, p.&nbsp;133) and the analogy of '']'' as an "epistemologic Odyssey: sailing between the Scylla monster of representationalism and the Charybdis whirlpool of ]" (p.&nbsp;134). ''Enactivism'', therefore is the middle ground between the two extremes . Maturana and Varela use this term to "confront the problem of understanding how our existence-the praxis of our living- is coupled to a surrounding world which appears filled with regularities that are at every instant the result of our biological and social histories.... to find a ''via media'': to understand the regularity of the world we are experiencing at every moment, but without any point of reference independent of ourselves that would give certainty to our descriptions and cognitive assertions. Indeed the whole mechanism of generating ourselves, as describers and observers tells us that our world, as the world which we bring forth in our coexistence with others, will always have precisely that mixture of regularity and mutability, that combination of solidity and shifting sand, so typical of human experience when we look at it up close."


Enactivism also addresses the ], referred to by Thompson as part of the '']'' in explaining how consciousness and subjective experience are related to brain and body.<ref name=EThompson2/> "The problem with the dualistic concepts of consciousness and life in standard formulations of the hard problem is that they exclude each other by construction".<ref name=EThompson3/> Instead, according to Thompson's view of enactivism, the study of consciousness or ] as exemplified by ] and ] is to complement science and its objectification of the world. "The whole universe of science is built upon the world as directly experienced, and if we want to subject science itself to rigorous scrutiny and arrive at a precise assessment of its meaning and scope, we must begin by reawakening the basic experience of the world of which science is the second-order expression" (Merleau-Ponty, ''The phenomenology of perception'' as quoted by Thompson, p.&nbsp;165). In this interpretation, enactivism asserts that science is formed or enacted as part of humankind's interactivity with its world, and by embracing phenomenology "science itself is properly situated in relation to the rest of human life and is thereby secured on a sounder footing."<ref name=EThompson4/><ref name=Baldwin/>
===Similar theories of the growth of knowledge===

Another current of biology-inspired theories of the growth of knowledge that are even more closely tied to ] in comparison to enactivism are those of ], such as ] and ].<ref>Gary Cziko (1995) (MIT Press)</ref> In common with enactivism is their emphasis on both action and embodiment as sources of that knowledge which must reflect the environment well enough for the organism to be able to survive in it and which makes them competitive enough to be able to reproduce at sustainable rate in their environment.
Enaction has been seen as a move to conjoin ] with ], that is, as adopting a ], an epistemology centered upon the active participation of the subject in constructing reality.<ref name=Mutelesi/><ref name=Chiari/> However, 'constructivism' focuses upon more than a simple 'interactivity' that could be described as a minor adjustment to 'assimilate' reality or 'accommodate' to it.<ref name=Glaserfeld/> Constructivism looks upon interactivity as a radical, creative, revisionist process in which the knower ''constructs'' a personal 'knowledge system' based upon their experience and tested by its viability in practical encounters with their environment. Learning is a result of perceived anomalies that produce dissatisfaction with existing conceptions.<ref name=Glasersfeld2/>

] also points out that ] is a forerunner of enactive and extended approaches to cognition.<ref name="Gallagher 110–126">{{Cite journal|last=Gallagher|first=Shaun|date=October 2014|title=Pragmatic Interventions into Enactive and Extended Conceptions of Cognition: Pragmatic Interventions into Enactive and Extended Conceptions of Cognition|url=http://doi.wiley.com/10.1111/phis.12027|journal=Philosophical Issues|language=en|volume=24|issue=1|pages=110–126|doi=10.1111/phis.12027}}</ref> According to him, enactive conceptions of cognition can be found in many pragmatists such as Charles Sanders Peirce and John Dewey. For example, Dewey says that "The brain is essentially an organ for effecting the reciprocal adjustment to each other of the stimuli received from the environment and responses directed upon it" (1916, pp.&nbsp;336–337).<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Hoernle|first1=R. F. Alfred|last2=Dewey|first2=John|date=July 1917|title=Essays in Experimental Logic|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/2178488|journal=The Philosophical Review|volume=26|issue=4|pages=421|doi=10.2307/2178488|jstor=2178488|hdl=2027/hvd.32044005126057|hdl-access=free}}</ref> This view is fully consistent with enactivist arguments that cognition is not just a matter of brain processes and brain is one part of the body consisting of the dynamical regulation.<ref name="Gallagher 110–126"/><ref>{{Cite book|last1=Cosmelli|first1=Diego|last2=Thompson|first2=Evan|date=2010-11-24|editor-last=Stewart|editor-first=John|editor2-last=Gapenne|editor2-first=Olivier|editor3-last=Di Paolo|editor3-first=Ezequiel A.|title=Embodiment or Envatment?: Reflections on the Bodily Basis of Consciousness|url=https://m.mitpress.universitypressscholarship.com:443/mobile/view/10.7551/mitpress/9780262014601.001.0001/upso-9780262014601-chapter-14|publisher=The MIT Press|pages=360–385|doi=10.7551/mitpress/9780262014601.003.0014|isbn=978-0-262-01460-1}}</ref> Robert Brandom, a neo-pragmatist, comments that "A founding idea of pragmatism is that the most fundamental kind of intentionality (in the sense of directedness towards objects) is the practical involvement with objects exhibited by a sentient creature dealing skillfully with its world" (2008, p.&nbsp;178).<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Brandom|first1=Robert|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/258378350|title=Between saying and doing: towards an analytic pragmatism|date=2008|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-156226-6|location=Oxford|oclc=258378350}}</ref>

How does constructivism relate to enactivism? From the above remarks it can be seen that ] expresses an interactivity between the knower and the known quite acceptable to an enactivist, but does not emphasize the structured probing of the environment by the knower that leads to the "perturbation relative to some expected result" that then leads to a new understanding.<ref name=Glasersfeld2/> It is this probing activity, especially where it is not accidental but deliberate, that characterizes enaction, and invokes ''affect'',<ref name=Ward2/> that is, the motivation and planning that lead to doing and to fashioning the probing, both observing and modifying the environment, so that "perceptions and nature condition one another through generating one another."<ref name=Diettrich/> The questioning nature of this probing activity is not an emphasis of ] and Glasersfeld.

Sharing enactivism's stress upon both action and embodiment in the incorporation of knowledge, but giving Glasersfeld's mechanism of viability an ] emphasis,<ref name=Diettrich2/> is ]. Inasmuch as an organism must reflect its environment well enough for the organism to be able to survive in it, and to be competitive enough to be able to reproduce at sustainable rate, the structure and reflexes of the organism itself embody knowledge of its environment. This biology-inspired theory of the growth of knowledge is closely tied to ], and is associated with evolutionary epistemologists such as ], ], ], and ].<ref name=Gontier/> According to Munz, "an organism is an ''embodied theory'' about its environment... Embodied theories are also no longer expressed in language, but in anatomical structures or reflex responses, etc."<ref name=Gontier/><ref name=Munz/>

One objection to enactive approaches to cognition is the so-called "scale-up objection". According to this objection, enactive theories only have limited value because they cannot "scale up" to explain more complex cognitive capacities like human thoughts. Those phenomena are extremely difficult to explain without positing representation.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Clark|first1=Andy|last2=Toribio|first2=Josefa|date=December 1994|title=Doing without representing?|url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/BF01063896|journal=Synthese|language=en|volume=101|issue=3|pages=401–431|doi=10.1007/BF01063896|hdl=1842/1301|s2cid=17136030|issn=0039-7857|hdl-access=free}}</ref> But recently, some philosophers are trying to respond to such objection. For example, Adrian Downey (2020) provides a non-representational account of Obsessive-compulsive disorder, and then argues that ecological-enactive approaches can respond to the "scaling up" objection.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Downey|first=Adrian|date=September 2020|title=It Just Doesn't Feel Right: OCD and the 'Scaling Up' Problem|url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11097-019-09644-3|journal=Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences|language=en|volume=19|issue=4|pages=705–727|doi=10.1007/s11097-019-09644-3|s2cid=214154577|issn=1568-7759}}</ref>


==Psychological aspects== ==Psychological aspects==
McGann & others <ref name=McGann>{{cite journal |author=Marek McGann, Hanne De Jaegher, Ezequiel Di Paolo |year= 2013 |title=Enaction and psychology |journal=Review of General Psychology |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=203–209 |url= http://www.academia.edu/4993021/Enaction_and_Psychology |doi= 10.1037/a0032935}} McGann & others<ref name=McGann>{{cite journal |author1=Marek McGann |author2=Hanne De Jaegher |author3=Ezequiel Di Paolo |year= 2013 |title=Enaction and psychology |journal=Review of General Psychology |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=203–209 |url= https://www.academia.edu/4993021 |doi= 10.1037/a0032935|s2cid=8986622 }}
</ref> argue that enactivism attempts to mediate between the explanatory role of the coupling between cognitive agent and environment and the traditional emphasis on brain mechanisms found in neuroscience and psychology. In the interactive approach to social cognition developed by De Jaegher & others,<ref name=Gallagher0>{{cite journal |author=Shaun Gallagher |year=2001 |title=The practice of mind |journal=Journal of Consciousness Studies |volume=8 |issue=5–7 |pages=83–107 |url=http://www.ummoss.org/Gallagher01.pdf}} </ref> argue that enactivism attempts to mediate between the explanatory role of the coupling between cognitive agent and environment and the traditional emphasis on brain mechanisms found in neuroscience and psychology. In the interactive approach to social cognition developed by De Jaegher & others,<ref name=Gallagher0>{{cite journal |author=Shaun Gallagher |year=2001 |title=The practice of mind |journal=Journal of Consciousness Studies |volume=8 |issue=5–7 |pages=83–107 |url=http://www.ummoss.org/Gallagher01.pdf}}
</ref><ref name=Gallager1> </ref><ref name=Gallager1>
{{cite book |author=Shaun Gallagher |isbn=978-0199204168 |edition=Paperback |year=2006 |title=How the Body Shapes the Mind |publisher=Oxford University Press |url=http://books.google.com/books/about/How_the_Body_Shapes_the_Mind.html?id=zhv5F-GYm98C}} {{cite book |author=Shaun Gallagher |isbn=978-0199204168 |edition=Paperback |year=2006 |title=How the Body Shapes the Mind |publisher=Oxford University Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zhv5F-GYm98C}}
</ref><ref name=Ratcliffe> </ref><ref name=Ratcliffe>
{{cite book |author=Matthew Ratcliffe |year=2008 |title=Rethinking Commonsense Psychology: A Critique of Folk Psychology, Theory of Mind and Simulation |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-0230221208 |url=http://books.google.com/books/about/Rethinking_Commonsense_Psychology.html?id=-JNyQgAACAAJ}} {{cite book |author=Matthew Ratcliffe |year=2008 |title=Rethinking Commonsense Psychology: A Critique of Folk Psychology, Theory of Mind and Simulation |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |isbn=978-0230221208 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-JNyQgAACAAJ}}
</ref> the dynamics of interactive processes are seen to play significant roles in coordinating interpersonal understanding, processes that in part include what they call ''Participatory Sense-Making''.<ref name=DeJaeger0> </ref> the dynamics of interactive processes are seen to play significant roles in coordinating interpersonal understanding, processes that in part include what they call ].<ref name=DeJaeger0>
{{cite journal |author=Hanne De Jaegher, Ezequiel Di Paolo |url=http://www.enactionschool.com/resources/papers/DeJaegherDiPaolo2007.pdf |year=2007 |title=Participatory Sense-Making: An enactive approach to social cognition |journal=Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences |volume=6 |issue=4 |pages=485–507 |doi=10.1007/s11097-007-9076-9}} {{cite journal |author1=Hanne De Jaegher |author2=Ezequiel Di Paolo |url=http://www.enactionschool.com/resources/papers/DeJaegherDiPaolo2007.pdf |year=2007 |title=Participatory Sense-Making: An enactive approach to social cognition |journal=Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences |volume=6 |issue=4 |pages=485–507 |doi=10.1007/s11097-007-9076-9|s2cid=142842155 }}
</ref><ref name=DeJaeger1> </ref><ref name=DeJaegher1>
{{cite journal |author=Hanne De Jaegher, Ezequiel Di Paolo , and Shaun Gallagher |year=2010 |title=Can social interaction constitute social cognition? |journal=Trends in Cognitive Sciences |volume=14 |issue=10 |pages=441–447 |url=http://ezequieldipaolo.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/dejaegher_dipaolo_gallagher_tics_2010.pdf |doi=10.1016/j.tics.2010.06.009}} {{cite journal |author1=Hanne De Jaegher |author2=Ezequiel Di Paolo |author3=Shaun Gallagher |year=2010 |title=Can social interaction constitute social cognition? |journal=Trends in Cognitive Sciences |volume=14 |issue=10 |pages=441–447 |url=http://ezequieldipaolo.files.wordpress.com/2011/10/dejaegher_dipaolo_gallagher_tics_2010.pdf |doi=10.1016/j.tics.2010.06.009 |pmid=20674467|s2cid=476406 }}
</ref> Recent developments of enactivism in the area of social neuroscience involve the proposal of ''The Interactive Brain Hypothesis''<ref name=DiPaolo3> </ref> Recent developments of enactivism in the area of social neuroscience involve the proposal of ''The Interactive Brain Hypothesis''<ref name=DiPaolo3>
{{cite journal |url=http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2012.00163/full |author=Ezequiel Di Paolo, Hanne De Jaegher |date=June 2012 |title= The Interactive Brain Hypothesis |journal=Frontiers in Human Neuroscience |volume=7 |issue=6 |doi=10.3389/fnhum.2012.00163}}</ref> where social cognition brain mechanisms, even those used in non-interactive situations, are proposed to have interactive origins. {{cite journal |author1=Ezequiel Di Paolo |author2=Hanne De Jaegher |date=June 2012 |title= The Interactive Brain Hypothesis |journal=Frontiers in Human Neuroscience |volume=7 |issue=6 |pages=163 |doi=10.3389/fnhum.2012.00163|pmid = 22701412|pmc=3369190 |doi-access=free }}</ref> where social cognition brain mechanisms, even those used in non-interactive situations, are proposed to have interactive origins.


===Enactive views of perception===
==Cultural aspects==
In the enactive view, perception "is not conceived as the transmission of information but more as an exploration of the world by various means. Cognition is not tied into the workings of an 'inner mind', some cognitive core, but occurs in directed interaction between the body and the world it inhabits."<ref name=McGann2>
Enactivism has a cultural aspect. It is part of a wider context as described by Andy Clark:<ref name=Clark>
{{cite book |title=Consciousness & Emotion: Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception |page=184 |author1=Marek McGann |author2=Steve Torrance |chapter=Doing It and Meaning It: And the relation between the two |isbn=9789027294616 |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing |year=2005 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LZk6AAAAQBAJ&pg=PA184 |editor1=Ralph D. Ellis |editor2=Natika Newton }}
{{cite book |title=Cognition and Technology: Co-existence, Convergence, and Co-evolution |chapter=Chapter 10: Towards a science of the bio-technological mind |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=vhA189tgdgUC&pg=PA25&lpg=PA25#v=onepage&q&f=false |pages=25 ''ff'' |author=Andy Clark |editor= Barbara Gorayska, Jacob Mey |publisher= John Benjamins Publishing |year=2004 |isbn=1588115445}}
</ref>
</ref> "But understanding our peculiar profiles as reasoners, thinkers, and knowers of our worlds requires an even broader perspective: one that targets multiple brains and bodies operating in specially constructed environments replete with artifacts, external symbols, and the variegated scaffoldings of science, art, and culture."


] in advocating an enactive view of perception<ref name=Noe>
These aspects are often subsumed under the heading ], which aims to uncover cultural influences upon feeling, thinking and acting. According to Shweder, 'cultural psychology' should be "the study of the way cultural traditions and social practices regulate, express, and transform the human psyche, resulting less in psychic unity for humankind than in ethnic divergences in mind, self and emotion."<ref name=Shweder>
{{cite book |author=Alva Noë |title= Action in Perception |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kFKvU2hPhxEC&pg=PA1 |pages=1 ''ff'' |chapter=Chapter 1: The enactive approach to perception: An introduction |isbn=9780262140881 |year=2004 |publisher=MIT Press}}
{{cite book |author=Richard A Shweder |title=Thinking through cultures: Expeditions in cultural psychology |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1991 |page=73 |isbn=9780674884168 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=7DmCoEsxVxQC&pg=PA73 }}
</ref> sought to resolve how we perceive three-dimensional objects, on the basis of two-dimensional input. He argues that we perceive this solidity (or 'volumetricity') by appealing to patterns of sensorimotor expectations. These arise from our agent-active 'movements and interaction' with objects, or 'object-active' changes in the object itself. The solidity is perceived through our expectations and skills in knowing how the object's appearance would change with changes in how we relate to it. He saw all perception as an active exploration of the world, rather than being a passive process, something which happens to us.
</ref>


Noë's idea of the role of 'expectations' in three-dimensional perception has been opposed by several philosophers, notably by ].<ref name=ClarkA1/> Clark points to difficulties of the enactive approach. He points to internal processing of visual signals, for example, in the ventral and dorsal pathways, ]. This results in an integrated perception of objects (their recognition and location, respectively) yet this processing cannot be described as an action or actions. In a more general criticism, Clark suggests that perception is not a matter of expectations about sensorimotor mechanisms guiding perception. Rather, although the limitations of sensorimotor mechanisms constrain perception, this sensorimotor activity is drastically filtered to fit current needs and purposes of the organism, and it is these imposed 'expectations' that govern perception, filtering for the 'relevant' details of sensorimotor input (called "sensorimotor summarizing").<ref name=ClarkA1/>
The particular role of enactivism in cultural psychology is to stress the role of interaction between the individual and their culture in arriving at meaning. According to Verheggen and Baerveldt:<ref name=Verheggen>

{{cite book |chapter=Chapter 8: Enactivism |author=Cor Baerveldt and Theo Verheggen |title=The Oxford Handbook of Culture and Psychology |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=WljI1r2e-SUC&pg=PA165 |pages=165''ff'' |doi=10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195396430.013.0009 |isbn=9780195396430 |date=May 2012}}</ref> "It appears that seemingly natural experience is thoroughly intertwined with sociocultural realities." They suggest that the social patterning of experience is to be understood through enactivism, "the idea that the reality we have in common, and in which we find ourselves, is neither a world that exists independently from us, nor a socially shared way of representing such a pregiven world, but a world itself brought forth by our ways of communicating and our joint action....The world we inhabit is manufactured of 'meaning' rather than 'information'."<ref name=Baerveldt>
These sensorimotor-centered and purpose-centered views appear to agree on the general scheme but disagree on the dominance issue – is the dominant component peripheral or central. Another view, the closed-loop perception one, assigns equal a-priori dominance to the peripheral and central components. In closed-loop perception, perception emerges through the process of inclusion of an item in a motor-sensory-motor loop, i.e., a loop (or loops) connecting the peripheral and central components that are relevant to that item.<ref name="AhiAssa1">Ahissar, E. and E. Assa (2016) Perception as a closed-loop convergence process. eLife 5:e12830.DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.12830</ref> The item can be a body part (in which case the loops are in steady-state) or an external object (in which case the loops are perturbed and gradually converge to a steady state). These enactive loops are always active, switching dominance by the need.
{{cite journal |title=Enactivism and the experiential reality of culture: Rethinking the epistemological basis of cultural psychology |author=Cor Baerveldt, Theo Verheggen |url=https://docs.google.com/file/d/0Bz8cVS8LoO7OTk9ZUkVqazFiU1U/edit |journal=Culture & Psychology |volume=5 |issue=2 |pages=183–206 |year=1999}}

Another application of enaction to perception is analysis of the human hand. The many remarkably demanding uses of the hand are not learned by instruction, but through a history of engagements that lead to the acquisition of skills. According to one interpretation, it is suggested that "the hand ...an organ of cognition", not a faithful subordinate working under top-down instruction, but a partner in a "bi-directional interplay between manual and brain activity."<ref name="Hutto">
{{cite book |title= Radicalizing Enactivism: Minds without content |author=], Erik Myin |pages=46 ''ff'' |chapter=A helping hand |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pAj-96LlBuMC&pg=PA46 |isbn= 9780262018548 |year=2013 |publisher=MIT Press}}
</ref> According to ]: "Enactivists are concerned to defend the view that our most elementary ways of engaging with the world and others - including our basic forms of perception and perceptual experience - are mindful in the sense of being phenomenally charged and intentionally directed, despite being non-representational and content-free."<ref name="Hutto2">
{{cite book |title= Radicalizing Enactivism: Minds without content |author1=Daniel D Hutto |author2=Erik Myin |pages=12–13 |chapter=Chapter 1: Enactivism: The radical line |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pAj-96LlBuMC&pg=PA12 |isbn= 9780262018548 |year=2013 |publisher=MIT Press}}
</ref> Hutto calls this position 'REC' (<u>R</u>adical <u>E</u>nactive <u>C</u>ognition): "According to REC, there is no way to distinguish neural activity that is imagined to be genuinely content involving (and thus truly mental, truly cognitive) from other non-neural activity that merely plays a supporting or enabling role in making mind and cognition possible."<ref name="Hutto2" />

===Participatory sense-making===

] and ] (2007)<ref name="DeJaeger0"/> have extended the enactive concept of sense-making<ref name="EThompson3"/> into the social domain. The idea takes as its departure point the process of interaction between individuals in a social encounter.<ref name=DeJaegher_etal>{{cite journal |author1=Hanne De Jaegher |author2=Ezequiel Di Paolo |author3=Shaun Gallagher |title= Can social interaction constitute social cognition? |journal=Trends in Cognitive Sciences |year=2010 |volume=14 |issue=10 |pages=441–447 |doi=10.1016/j.tics.2010.06.009 |pmid=20674467|s2cid=476406 }}
</ref> De Jaegher and Di Paolo argue that the interaction process itself can take on a form of autonomy (operationally defined). This allows them to define social cognition as the generation of meaning and its transformation through interacting individuals.

The notion of participatory sense-making has led to the proposal that interaction processes can sometimes play constitutive roles in social cognition (De Jaegher, Di Paolo, Gallagher, 2010).<ref name="DeJaegher1"/> It has been applied to research in ]''<ref name="DiPaolo3"/><ref name=SchilbachTimmermans>
{{cite journal |author1=Leonhard Schilbach |author2=Bert Timmermans |author3=Vasudevi Reddy |author4=Alan Costall |author5=Gary Bente |author6=Tobias Schlicht |author7=Kai Vogeley |title= Toward a second-person neuroscience |journal=Behavioral and Brain Sciences |year=2013 |volume=36 |issue=4 |pages=393–414 |doi=10.1017/S0140525X12000660|pmid=23883742 |citeseerx=10.1.1.476.2200 |s2cid=54587375 }}</ref>'' and ].''<ref name="DeJaegher_autism">{{cite journal |author= Hanne De Jaegher |title= Embodiment and sense-making in autism|journal=Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience |year=2012 |volume=7 |pages=15 |doi=10.3389/fnint.2013.00015|pmid= 23532205|pmc= 3607806|doi-access= free}}
</ref>''

In a similar vein, "an inter-enactive approach to agency holds that the behavior of agents in a social situation unfolds not only according to their individual abilities and goals, but also according to the conditions and constraints imposed by the autonomous dynamics of the interaction process itself".<ref name=STorrance>
{{cite journal |title=An Inter-Enactive Approach to Agency: Participatory Sense-Making, Dynamics, and Sociality |author1=Steve Torrance |author2=Tom Froese |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229001783 |journal=Human Mente |volume=15 |pages=21–53 |year=2011 }}
</ref> According to Torrance, enactivism involves five interlocking themes related to the question "What is it to be a (cognizing, conscious) agent?" It is:<ref name=STorrance/>
:1. to be a biologically autonomous (]) organism
:2. to generate ''significance'' or ''meaning'', rather than to act via...updated internal representations of the external world
:3. to engage in sense-making via dynamic coupling with the environment
:4. to 'enact' or 'bring forth' a world of significances by mutual co-determination of the organism with its enacted world
:5. to arrive at an experiential awareness via lived embodiment in the world.

Torrance adds that "many kinds of agency, in particular the agency of human beings, cannot be understood separately from understanding the nature of the interaction that occurs between agents." That view introduces the social applications of enactivism. "Social cognition is regarded as the result of a special form of action, namely ''social interaction''...the enactive approach looks at the circular dynamic within a dyad of embodied agents."<ref name=FuchsT>
{{cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Olm10GVwV74C&pg=PA206 |page=206 |chapter=Non-representational intersubjectivity |author1=Thomas Fuchs |author2=Hanne De Jaegher |isbn=9783794527915 |year=2010 |publisher=Schattauer Verlag |title=The Embodied Self: Dimensions, Coherence and Disorders |editor1=Thomas Fuchs |editor2=Heribert C. Sattel |editor3=Peter Henningsen }}
</ref>
In ], enactivism is seen as a way to uncover cultural influences upon feeling, thinking and acting.<ref name=Verheggen>{{cite book |chapter=Chapter 8: Enactivism |author1=Cor Baerveldt |author2=Theo Verheggen |title=The Oxford Handbook of Culture and Psychology |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WljI1r2e-SUC&pg=PA165 |pages=165''ff'' |doi=10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195396430.013.0009 |isbn=9780195396430 |date=May 2012 |quote= Whereas the enactive approach in general has focused on sense-making as an embodied and situated activity, enactive cultural psychology emphasizes the expressive and dynamically enacted nature of cultural meaning.}}</ref> Baerveldt and Verheggen argue that "It appears that seemingly natural experience is thoroughly intertwined with sociocultural realities." They suggest that the social patterning of experience is to be understood through enactivism, "the idea that the reality we have in common, and in which we find ourselves, is neither a world that exists independently from us, nor a socially shared way of representing such a pregiven world, but a world itself brought forth by our ways of communicating and our joint action....The world we inhabit is manufactured of 'meaning' rather than 'information'.<ref name=Baerveldt>
{{cite journal |title=Enactivism and the experiential reality of culture: Rethinking the epistemological basis of cultural psychology |author1=Cor Baerveldt |author2=Theo Verheggen |url=https://docs.google.com/file/d/0Bz8cVS8LoO7OTk9ZUkVqazFiU1U/edit |journal=Culture & Psychology |volume=5 |issue=2 |pages=183–206 |year=1999 |doi=10.1177/1354067x9952006|s2cid=145397218 }}
</ref>

] attempted to apply Maturana and Varela's notion of autopoiesis to social systems.<ref name=Luhmann>
{{cite book |title=Social systems |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zVZQW4gxXk4C&pg=PA34 |isbn= 9780804726252 |year=1995 |publisher=Stanford University Press |author=Niklas Luhmann}}
</ref> "A core concept of social systems theory is derived from biological systems theory: the concept of ''autopoiesis''. Chilean biologist Humberto Maturana come up with the concept to explain how biological systems such as cells are a product of their own production." "Systems exist by way of operational closure and this means that they each construct themselves and their own realities."<ref name=Moeller>
{{cite book |chapter=Part 1: A new way of thinking about society |pages= 12 ''ff'' |author=Hans-Georg Moeller |year=2011 |isbn= 978-0812695984 |publisher=Open Court |title=Luhmann Explained: From Souls to Systems |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tuKsEvpcj9MC&pg=PA12}}
</ref> </ref>


==Educational aspects== ==Educational aspects==
The first definition of enaction was introduced by psychologist ],<ref name=Pugliese> The first definition of enaction was introduced by psychologist ],<ref name=Pugliese>
{{cite book |title=Intelligent Virtual Agents: |chapter=A framework for motion based bodily enaction with virtual characters; §2.1 Enaction |author=Roberto Pugliese, Klaus Lehtonen |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=QU9b_IjVMF4C&pg=PA163 |page=163 |isbn=9783642239731 |publisher=Springer |year=2011}} {{cite book |title=Intelligent Virtual Agents |chapter=A framework for motion based bodily enaction with virtual characters; §2.1 Enaction |author1=Roberto Pugliese |author2=Klaus Lehtonen |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QU9b_IjVMF4C&pg=PA163 |page=163 |isbn=9783642239731 |publisher=Springer |year=2011}}
</ref><ref name=Beck> </ref><ref name=Beck>
{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=8V9BAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA104 |page=104 |title=From Diagnostics to Learning Success: Proceedings in Vocational Education and Training |isbn=978-9462091894 |edition=Paperback |year=2013 |publisher=Springer Science & Business |author=Stephanie A Hillen |chapter=Chapter III: What can research on technology for learning in vocational educational training teach media didactics? |editor=Klaus Beck, Olga Zlatkin-Troitschanskaia, eds}} {{cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8V9BAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA104 |page=104 |title=From Diagnostics to Learning Success: Proceedings in Vocational Education and Training |isbn=978-9462091894 |edition=Paperback |year=2013 |publisher=Springer Science & Business |author=Stephanie A Hillen |chapter=Chapter III: What can research on technology for learning in vocational educational training teach media didactics? |editor1=Klaus Beck |editor2=Olga Zlatkin-Troitschanskaia }}
</ref> who introduced enaction as 'learning by doing' in his discussion of how children learn, and how they can best be helped to learn.<ref name=Bruner>{{cite book |author=]|year=1966 |title=Toward a theory of instruction |publisher=Belknap Press of Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0674897007}}</ref><ref name=Bruner2>{{cite book |author=Jerome Bruner |year=1968 |title=Processes of cognitive growth: Infancy |publisher= Crown Pub |isbn= 978-0517517482}}{{oclc|84376}}</ref> He associated enaction with two other ways of knowledge organization: ] and ]ic. The second use was by ] and ].<ref name=Bopry> </ref> who introduced enaction as 'learning by doing' in his discussion of how children learn, and how they can best be helped to learn.<ref name=Bruner>{{cite book |author=Jerome Bruner|year=1966 |title=Toward a theory of instruction |url=https://archive.org/details/towardtheoryofin00brun|url-access=registration|publisher=Belknap Press of Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0674897007|author-link=Jerome Bruner }}</ref><ref name=Bruner2>{{cite book |author=Jerome Bruner |year=1968 |title=Processes of cognitive growth: Infancy |publisher= Crown Pub |isbn= 978-0517517482 |oclc=84376}}</ref> He associated enaction with two other ways of knowledge organization: ] and ]ic.<ref name=Bruner3>Quote from
{{cite book |title=Toward a Theory of Instruction |author=Jerome Seymour Bruner |url=http://h.uib.no/examplewiki/en/images/5/5a/Bruner_1966_Theory_of_Instruction.pdf |isbn=9780674897014 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=1966 |page=44 |access-date=2014-05-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140502001724/http://h.uib.no/examplewiki/en/images/5/5a/Bruner_1966_Theory_of_Instruction.pdf |archive-date=2014-05-02 |url-status=dead }} as quoted from {{cite book |title=Fundamental Constructs in Mathematics Education |author=J Bruner |editor1=John Mason |editor2=Sue Johnston-Wilder |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EA3LtKYTa7YC&pg=PA260 |page=260 |chapter=Chapter 10: Sustaining mathematical activity |year=2004 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn= 978-0415326988 |edition=Paperback}}</ref>
{{cite book |title=The Praeger Handbook of Education and Psychology, Volume 1 |author=Jeanette Bopry |chapter=Providing a warrant for constructivist practice: the contribution of Francisco Varela |quote=Varela's enactive framework beginning with his collaboration on ] theory with his mentor Humberto Maturana enaction as a framework within which these theories work as a matter of course. |editor=Joe L. Kincheloe, Raymond A. Horn, eds |year=2007 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=9780313331237 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=O1ugEIEid6YC&pg=PA474 |pages=474 ''ff''}}

:"Any domain of knowledge (or any problem within that domain of knowledge) can be represented in three ways: by a set of actions appropriate for achieving a certain result (enactive representation); by a set of summary images or graphics that stand for a concept without defining it fully (iconic representation); and by a set of symbolic or logical propositions drawn from a symbolic system that is governed by rules or laws for forming and transforming propositions (symbolic representation)"
The term 'enactive framework' was elaborated upon by ] and ].<ref name=Bopry>
{{cite book |title=The Praeger Handbook of Education and Psychology, Volume 1 |author=Jeanette Bopry |chapter=Providing a warrant for constructivist practice: the contribution of Francisco Varela |quote=Varela's enactive framework beginning with his collaboration on ] theory with his mentor Humberto Maturana enaction as a framework within which these theories work as a matter of course. |editor1=Joe L. Kincheloe |editor2=Raymond A. Horn |year=2007 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |isbn=9780313331237 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O1ugEIEid6YC&pg=PA474 |pages=474 ''ff''}}
</ref> </ref>


Sriramen argues that enactivism provides "a rich and powerful explanatory theory for learning and being."<ref name= Sriraman> Sriramen argues that enactivism provides "a rich and powerful explanatory theory for learning and being."<ref name= Sriraman>
{{cite book |title=Theories of Mathematics Education: Seeking New Frontiers |author=Bharath Sriraman, Lyn English |isbn=3642007422 |year=2009 |publisher=Springer |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Kd_LgW2AXIoC&pg=PA42 |pages=42 ''ff'' |chapter=Enactivism}}</ref> and that it is closely related to both the ] of ], and also the ] of ].<ref name=Sriraman/> Piaget focused on the child's immediate environment, and suggested cognitive structures like spatial perception emerge as a result of the child's interaction with the world,<ref name=Roth> {{cite book |title=Theories of Mathematics Education: Seeking New Frontiers |author1=Bharath Sriraman |author2=Lyn English|author2-link=Lyn English |isbn=978-3642007422 |year=2009 |publisher=Springer |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kd_LgW2AXIoC&pg=PA42 |pages=42 ''ff'' |chapter=Enactivism}}</ref> and that it is closely related to both the ] of ], and also the ] of ].<ref name=Sriraman/> Piaget focused on the child's immediate environment, and suggested cognitive structures like spatial perception emerge as a result of the child's interaction with the world.<ref name=Roth>
{{cite book |title=Geometry as Objective Science in Elementary School Classrooms: Mathematics in the Flesh |author=Wolff-Michael Roth |isbn=1136732209 |year=2012 |publisher=Routledge |pages=41 ''ff'' |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=cXSsAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT41 |chapter=Epistemology and psychology: Jean Piaget and modern constructivism}} {{cite book |title=Geometry as Objective Science in Elementary School Classrooms: Mathematics in the Flesh |author=Wolff-Michael Roth |isbn=978-1136732201 |year=2012 |publisher=Routledge |pages=41 ''ff'' |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cXSsAgAAQBAJ&pg=PT41 |chapter=Epistemology and psychology: Jean Piaget and modern constructivism}}
</ref> According to Piaget, children ''construct'' knowledge, using what they know in new ways and testing it, and the environment provides feedback concerning the adequacy of their construction.<ref name= Cziko>
</ref> while in a cultural context, Vygotsky suggested that the kind of cognition that can take place also is contingent upon its sociohistorical context.<ref name=Kincheloe>
{{cite book |title=The Praeger Handbook of Education and Psychology, Volume 1 |chapter=Interpretivists drawing on the power of enactivism |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=O1ugEIEid6YC&pg=PA24 |pages=24 ''ff'' |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2007 |editor=Joe L. Kincheloe, Raymond A. Horn, eds |author=Joe L Kincheloe |isbn=0313331235}} {{cite book |title=Without Miracles: Universal Selection Theory and the Second Darwinian Revolution |author=Gary Cziko |chapter=Chapter 12: Education; The provision and transmission of truth, or the selectionist growth of fallible knowledge? |page=222 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v1JEypylerUC&pg=PA222 |year=1997 |isbn=9780262531474 |publisher=MIT Press}}
</ref> In a cultural context, Vygotsky suggested that the kind of cognition that can take place is not dictated by the engagement of the isolated child, but is also a function of social interaction and dialogue that is contingent upon a sociohistorical context.<ref name=Kincheloe>
{{cite book |title=The Praeger Handbook of Education and Psychology, Volume 1 |chapter=Interpretivists drawing on the power of enactivism |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O1ugEIEid6YC&pg=PA24 |pages=24 ''ff'' |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2007 |editor1=Joe L. Kincheloe |editor2=Raymond A. Horn |author=Joe L Kincheloe |isbn=978-0313331237}}
</ref> Enactivism in educational theory "looks at each learning situation as a complex system consisting of teacher, learner, and context, all of which frame and co-create the learning situation."<ref name=Vithal> </ref> Enactivism in educational theory "looks at each learning situation as a complex system consisting of teacher, learner, and context, all of which frame and co-create the learning situation."<ref name=Vithal>
{{cite book |editor=Renuka Vithal, Jill Adler, Christine Keitel, eds |title=Researching Mathematics Education in South Africa: Perspectives, Practices and Possibilities |chapter=Chapter 9: Dilemmas of change: seeing the complex rather than the complicated? |page=240 |author=Chris Breen |isbn=0796920478 |publisher=HSRC Press |year=2005 |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=byWHt_NVUEgC&pg=RA6-PA240}} {{cite book |editor1=Renuka Vithal |editor2=Jill Adler |editor3=Christine Keitel |title=Researching Mathematics Education in South Africa: Perspectives, Practices and Possibilities |chapter=Chapter 9: Dilemmas of change: seeing the complex rather than the complicated? |page=240 |author=Chris Breen |isbn=978-0796920478 |publisher=HSRC Press |year=2005 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=byWHt_NVUEgC&pg=RA6-PA240}}
</ref> Enactivism in eduction is very closely related to ],<ref name=VanDeGevel> </ref> Enactivism in education is very closely related to ],<ref name=VanDeGevel>
{{cite book |title=The nexus between artificial intelligence and economics |chapter=§3.2.2 Enactive artificial intelligence |quote=''Enactivism'' may be considered as the most developed model of embodied situated cognition...Knowing is inseparable from doing. |url=http://books.google.com/books?id=uek_AAAAQBAJ&pg=PA21 |page=21 |author=Ad J. W. van de Gevel, Charles N. Noussair |isbn=3642336477 |publisher=Springer |year=2013}} {{cite book |title=The nexus between artificial intelligence and economics |chapter=§3.2.2 Enactive artificial intelligence |quote=''Enactivism'' may be considered as the most developed model of embodied situated cognition...Knowing is inseparable from doing. |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uek_AAAAQBAJ&pg=PA21 |page=21 |author=Ad J. W. van de Gevel, Charles N. Noussair |isbn=978-3642336478 |publisher=Springer |year=2013}}
</ref> which holds that "knowledge is situated, being in part a product of the activity, context, and culture in which it is developed and used."<ref name=Collins> </ref> which holds that "knowledge is situated, being in part a product of the activity, context, and culture in which it is developed and used."<ref name=Collins>
{{cite journal |title=Situated cognition and the culture of learning |author=John Seely Brown, Allan Collins, Paul Duguid |url=http://www.exploratorium.edu/ifi/resources/museumeducation/situated.html |journal=Educational Researcher |volume=18 |number=1 |pages=32–42 |date=Jan–Feb 1989}} {{cite journal |title=Situated cognition and the culture of learning |author1=John Seely Brown |author2=Allan Collins |author3=Paul Duguid |url=http://www.exploratorium.edu/ifi/resources/museumeducation/situated.html |journal=Educational Researcher |volume=18 |number=1 |pages=32–42 |date=Jan–Feb 1989 |doi=10.3102/0013189x018001032 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141008045228/http://www.exploratorium.edu/ifi/resources/museumeducation/situated.html |archive-date=2014-10-08 |hdl=2142/17979 |s2cid=9824073 |hdl-access=free }}
</ref> This approach challenges the "separating of what is learned from how it is learned and used."<ref name=Collins/> </ref> This approach challenges the "separating of what is learned from how it is learned and used."<ref name=Collins/>


==Artificial intelligence aspects==
==Scholars with sympathetic ideas==
{{main|Enactive interfaces}}
<!-- This list is derived from Varela et al., 1991, p.7. Please do not add to it without citing a source. -->
The ideas of enactivism regarding how organisms engage with their environment have interested those involved in ] and ]. The analogy is drawn that a robot can be designed to interact and learn from its environment in a manner similar to the way an organism does,<ref name=Sandini>
{| width=85%
{{cite book |chapter=The ''iCub'' cognitive humanoid robot: An open-system research platform for enactive cognition |author1=Giulio Sandini |author2=Giorgio Metta |author3=David Vernon |title=50 Years of Artificial Intelligence: Essays Dedicated to the 50th Anniversary of Artificial Intelligence |editor1=Max Lungarella |editor2=Fumiya Iida |editor3=Josh Bongard |editor4=Rolf Pfeifer |publisher=Springer |year=2007 |isbn= 9783540772958}}
|- valign ="top"
</ref> and a human can interact with a computer-aided design tool or data base using an interface that creates an enactive environment for the user, that is, all the user's tactile, auditory, and visual capabilities are enlisted in a mutually explorative engagement, capitalizing upon all the user's abilities, and not at all limited to cerebral engagement.<ref name=Bordegoni>
|width=33%|
{{cite book |title=Emotional Engineering: Service Development |chapter=§4.5.2 Design tools based upon enactive interfaces |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ow-UFDj15rUC&pg=PA78 |pages=78 ''ff'' |isbn=9781849964234 |year=2010 |publisher=Springer |author=Monica Bordegoni |editor=Shuichi Fukuda}}
* ]
</ref> In these areas it is common to refer to ]s as a design concept, the idea that an environment or an interface affords opportunities for enaction, and good design involves optimizing the role of such affordances.<ref name=Norman>
* ]
{{cite book |title=The Design of Everyday Things |edition=Revised and expanded |quote=An affordance is a relationship between the properties of an object and the capabilities of the agent that determine just how the object could possibly be used. |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nVQPAAAAQBAJ&pg=PT17 |year=2013 |page=11 |isbn=978-0465050659 |publisher=Basic Books |author=Don Norman |chapter=Affordances }}
* ]
</ref><ref name=Kim>
* ]<ref group=AuthorWebPages></ref>
{{cite book |title=Encyclopedia of human computer interaction |chapter=The use and evolution of affordance in HCI |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h9iZh_I1YREC&pg=PA668 |pages=668 ''ff'' |isbn=9781591407980 |year=2006 |publisher=Idea Group Inc |author=Georgios S Christou |editor=Claude Ghaoui}}
* ]
</ref><ref name=Kaipainen>
* ]
{{cite journal |title=Enactive Systems and Enactive Media: Embodied Human-Machine Coupling beyond Interfaces |journal=Leonardo |volume=44 |pages=433–438 |date=October 2011 |issue=5 |doi=10.1162/LEON_a_00244 |author1=Mauri Kaipainen |author2=Niklas Ravaja |author3=Pia Tikka |s2cid=17294711 |display-authors=etal|url=http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:sh:diva-12214 }}
* ]
</ref><ref name=Boy>
* ]
* ]
* ]


{{cite book |title=Orchestrating Human-Centered Design |author=Guy Boy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I5gCTZCIL3AC&pg=PA118 |isbn=9781447143383 |year=2012 |publisher=Springer |page=118 |quote=The organization producing the system can itself be defined as an autopoietic system in Maturana and Varela's sense. An autopoietic system is producer and product at the same time. HCD is both the process of design and the design itself.}}
|width=33%|


</ref><ref name=Thannhuber>
* ]
{{cite journal |title=An autopoietic approach for knowledge management systems in manufacturing enterprises |author1=Markus Thannhuber |author2=Mitchell M Tseng |author3=Hans-Jörg Bullinger |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/223035600 |journal=Annals of the CIRP-Manufacturing Technology |volume=50 |issue=1 |year=2001 |pages=313 ''ff'' |doi=10.1016/s0007-8506(07)62129-5}}</ref>
* ]
* ]<ref group=AuthorWebPages></ref>
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]<ref group=AuthorWebPages></ref>
* ]
* ]<ref group=AuthorWebPages></ref>


The activity in the AI community has influenced enactivism as a whole. Referring extensively to modeling techniques for ] by Beer,<ref name=Beer>
|width=33%|
{{cite journal |author=Randall D Beer |year=1995 |title=A dynamical systems perspective on agent-environment interaction.
* ]<ref group=AuthorWebPages></ref>
|journal= Artificial Intelligence |volume=72 |issue=1–2 |pages=173–215 |doi=10.1016/0004-3702(94)00005-l}}
* ]
</ref> the modeling of learning behavior by Kelso,<ref name=Kelso>
* ]
{{cite book |author=James AS Kelso |year=2009 |chapter=Coordination dynamics |editor=R. A. Meyers |title= Encyclopedia of complexity and system science |pages= 1537–1564 |isbn=978-0-387-75888-6 |doi=10.1007/978-0-387-30440-3_101 }}
* ]
</ref> and to modeling of sensorimotor activity by Saltzman,<ref name=Saltzman>
* ]<ref group=AuthorWebPages></ref>
{{cite book |author=Eliot L. Saltzman |year=1995 |chapter=Dynamics and coordinate systems in skilled sensorimotor activity |editor1=T. van Gelder |editor2=R. F. Port |title=Mind as motion: Explorations in the dynamics of cognition |publisher=MIT Press |isbn=9780262161503 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=e6HUM6V8QbQC&pg=PA151 |page= |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/mindasmotionexpl0000unse/page/151 }}
* ]
</ref> McGann, De Jaegher, and Di Paolo discuss how this work makes the dynamics of coupling between an agent and its environment, the foundation of enactivism, "an operational, empirically observable phenomenon."<ref name=McGann3>{{cite journal |author1=Marek McGann |author2=Hanne De Jaegher |author3=Ezequiel Di Paolo |year= 2013 |title=Enaction and psychology |journal=Review of General Psychology |volume=17 |issue=2 |pages=203–209 |url= https://www.academia.edu/4993021 |doi= 10.1037/a0032935 |s2cid=8986622 |quote=Such modeling techniques allow us to explore the parameter space of coupling between agent and environment...to the point that their basic principles (the universals, if such there are, of enactive psychology) can be brought clearly into view.}}
* ]
</ref> That is, the AI environment invents examples of enactivism using concrete examples that, although not as complex as living organisms, isolate and illuminate basic principles.
* ] <!-- It was his list -->
* ]
* ]
|}


=== Mathematical formalisms ===
==Yet other authors of similar "Natural Growth of Knowledge" theories ==
{{main|artificial general intelligence}}
* ]
Enactive cognition has been formalised in order to address subjectivity in ].
* ]

A mathematical formalism of AGI is an agent proven to maximise a measure of intelligence.<ref>{{cite thesis |last=Legg |first=Shane |date=2008 |title=Machine Super Intelligence |publisher=University of Lugano |url=http://www.vetta.org/documents/Machine_Super_Intelligence.pdf}}</ref> Prior to 2022, the only such formalism was ], which maximised “the ability to satisfy goals in a wide range of environments”.<ref>{{cite book |last=Hutter |first=Marcus |date=2005 |title=Universal Artificial Intelligence: Sequential Decisions Based on Algorithmic Probability |series=Texts in Theoretical Computer Science an EATCS Series |url=https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/b138233 |publisher=Springer |doi=10.1007/b138233 |isbn= 978-3-540-26877-2}}</ref> In 2015 ] and ] showed that "Legg-Hutter intelligence is measured with respect to a fixed UTM. AIXI is the most intelligent policy if it uses the same UTM", a result which "undermines all existing optimality properties for AIXI", rendering them subjective.<ref>{{cite conference | conference=The 28th Conference on Learning Theory | last1=Leike | first1=Jan | last2=Hutter | first2=Marcus | title = Bad Universal Priors and Notions of Optimality | date=2015 | eprint= 1510.04931 | url = https://proceedings.mlr.press/v40/Leike15.html}}</ref>

==Criticism==
One of the essential theses of this approach is that biological systems generate meanings, i.e. they are ] systems, engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions.<ref name=Jaegher1/> Since this thesis raised the problems of beginning cognition for organisms in the developmental stage of only simple reflexes (the ] and the problem of primary data entry<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Val Danilov |first=Igor |date= 2023|title=Low-Frequency Oscillations for Nonlocal Neuronal Coupling in Shared Intentionality Before and After Birth: Toward the Origin of Perception |url=https://www.lidsen.com/journals/neurobiology/neurobiology-07-04-192 |journal=OBM Neurobiology |language=en |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=1–17 |doi=10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2304192|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Val Danilov |first=Igor |date= 2023|title=Shared Intentionality Modulation at the Cell Level: Low-Frequency Oscillations for Temporal Coordination in Bioengineering Systems |url=https://www.lidsen.com/journals/neurobiology/neurobiology-07-04-185 |journal=OBM Neurobiology |language=en |volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=1–17 |doi=10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2304185|doi-access=free }}</ref>), enactivists proposed the concept of embodied information that serves to start cognition.<ref name="Evan Thompson"/> However, critics highlight that this idea requires introducing the nature of ] before engaging embodied information.<ref name="Val Theory 2023">Val Danilov, I. (2023). "Theoretical Grounds of Shared Intentionality for Neuroscience in Developing Bioengineering Systems." ''OBM Neurobiology'' 2023; 7(1): 156; doi:10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2301156. https://www.lidsen.com/journals/neurobiology/neurobiology-07-01-156 .</ref> In a natural environment, the stimulus-reaction pair (causation) is unpredictable due to many irrelevant stimuli claiming to be randomly associated with the embodied information.<ref name="Val Theory 2023" /> While embodied information is only beneficial when intentionality is already in place, enactivists introduced the notion of the generation of meanings by biological systems (engaging in transformational interactions) without introducing a neurophysiological basis of intentionality.<ref name="Val Theory 2023" />


==See also== ==See also==
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* ] *]
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* ]
* ] *]
*]
* ]
*]
* ]
* ] *]
*]
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* ]
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* ]
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*]
|}
{{colend}}


==Further reading== ==Notes==
{{Reflist |group=Note |refs=
* De Jaegher, H., and Di Paolo, E. A. (2007). Participatory sense-making: An enactive approach to social cognition. ''Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences'', 6(4), 485 – 507.
<ref group=Note name=Cognitivism>
* Di Paolo, E. A., Rohde, M. and De Jaegher, H., (2010). ''Horizons for the Enactive Mind: Values, Social Interaction, and Play.'' In J. Stewart, O. Gapenne and E. A. Di Paolo (eds), Enaction: Towards a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp.&nbsp;33 – 87. ISBN 9780262014601
Cognition as information processing like that of a digital computer. From {{cite book |author=Evan Thompson |title=Mind in Life |isbn=978-0674057517|date=2010-09-30 |publisher=Harvard University Press }} ''Cognitivism'', p. 4; See also {{cite encyclopedia |title=The computational theory of mind |author=Steven Horst |encyclopedia= The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 Edition) |editor=Edward N. Zalta |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2011/entries/computational-mind/ |date=December 10, 2009}}
* Hutto, D. D. (Ed.) (2006). ''Radical Enactivism: Intentionality, phenomenology, and narrative.'' In R. D. Ellis & N. Newton (Series Eds.), ''Consciousness & Emotion, vol. 2.'' ISBN 90-272-4151-1
</ref>
* McGann, M. & Torrance, S. (2005). Doing it and meaning it (and the relationship between the two). In R. D. Ellis & N. Newton, ''Consciousness & Emotion, vol. 1: Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception''. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. ISBN 1-58811-596-8
<ref group=Note name=Connectionism>
Cognition as emergent patterns of activity in a neural network. From {{cite book |author=Evan Thompson |title=Mind in Life |isbn=978-0674057517|date=2010-09-30 |publisher=Harvard University Press }} ''Connectionism'', p. 8; See also {{cite journal |title=Connectionism |author=James Garson |journal= The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 Edition) |editor=Edward N. Zalta |url=http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2012/entries/connectionism/ |date=July 27, 2010}}
</ref>
}}


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist|30em|refs=
{{reflist}}

<ref name=Baldwin>
{{cite book |author=Thomas Baldwin |title=Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Basic Writings |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OS8FM-AFvvsC&pg=PA65 |chapter=Part One: Merleau-Ponty's prospectus of his work |page=65 |quote=Science has not and never will have, by its nature, the same significance ''qua'' form of being as the world which we perceive, for the simple reason that it is a rationale or explanation of that world. |isbn= 978-0415315869 |year=2003 |publisher=Routledge|title-link=Maurice Merleau-Ponty }}
</ref>

<ref name=Burman>{{cite journal |author=Jeremy Trevelyan Burman |year=2006 |journal=Journal of Consciousness Studies |title=Book reviews: ''Consciousness & Emotion'' |url=http://www.imprint.co.uk/pdf/13_12_br.pdf |volume=13 |issue=12 |pages=115–124 |access-date=2006-12-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927033803/http://www.imprint.co.uk/pdf/13_12_br.pdf |archive-date=2007-09-27 |url-status=dead }} From a review of {{cite book |title=Consciousness & Emotion: Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception |editor1=Ralph D. Ellis |editor2=Natika Newton |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LZk6AAAAQBAJ |isbn=9789027294616 |year=2005 |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing }}</ref>

<ref name=Chiari>
{{cite encyclopedia |title=Constructivism |author1=Gabriele Chiari |author2=M. Laura Nuzzo |encyclopedia=The Internet Encyclopaedia of Personal Construct Psychology |url=http://www.pcp-net.org/encyclopaedia/constructivism.html}}
</ref>

<ref name=ClarkA>
{{cite journal |author1=Andy Clark |author2=Josefa Toribio |title=Doing without representing |journal =Synthese |volume=101 |issue=3 |pages=401–434 |year=1994 |url=http://www.philosophy.ed.ac.uk/people/clark/pubs/DoingW-O-rep.pdf |doi=10.1007/bf01063896|hdl=1842/1301 |s2cid=17136030 }}
</ref>

<ref name=ClarkA1>
{{cite journal |author=Andy Clark |title=Vision as Dance? Three Challenges for Sensorimotor Contingency Theory |journal= Psyche: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research on Consciousness |volume=12 |issue=1 |date=March 2006 |url= https://journalpsyche.org/files/0xaaea.pdf}}
</ref>

<ref name=Diettrich>
{{cite book |author=Olaf Diettrich |chapter=The biological boundary conditions for our classical physical world view |title=Evolutionary Epistemology, Language and Culture |page=88 |year=2006 |publisher=Springer |editor1=Nathalie Gontier |editor2=Jean Paul van Bendegem |editor3=Diederik Aerts |isbn=9781402033957 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hp2JiTDBbWkC&pg=PA88}}
</ref>

<ref name=Diettrich2>
"The notion of 'truth' is replaced with 'viability' within the subjects' experiential world." From {{cite book |title= The handbook of evolution: The evolution of human societies and culture |author=Olaf Diettrich |chapter=Cognitive evolution; footnote 2 |page=61 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ex5c_pyOsTwC&pg=PA61 |editor1=Franz M. Wuketits |editor2=Christoph Antweiler |year=2008 |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell|isbn=9783527620333 }} and in ''Evolutionary Epistemology, Language and Culture'' cited above, p. 90.
</ref>

<ref name=Gallagher>
Mark Rowlands (2010, p. 3) attributes the term 4Es to Shaun Gallagher.
</ref>

<ref name=Glaserfeld>
{{cite book |author= Ernst von Glasersfeld |title=Epistemology and education |chapter=Report no. 14: Piaget and the Radical Constructivist Epistemology |chapter-url=http://www.vonglasersfeld.com/034 |editor1=CD Smock |editor2=E von Glaserfeld |publisher=Follow Through Publications |pages=1–24 |year=1974}}
</ref>

<ref name=Glasersfeld2>
{{cite journal |author= Ernst von Glasersfeld |url=http://www.univie.ac.at/constructivism/EvG/papers/118.pdf |title=Cognition, construction of knowledge and teaching |journal=Synthese |volume=80 |issue=1 |pages=121–140 |year=1989 |doi=10.1007/bf00869951|s2cid=46967038 }}
</ref>

<ref name=Gontier>
{{cite encyclopedia |author=Nathalie Gontier |title=Evolutionary Epistemology |url=http://www.iep.utm.edu/evo-epis/ |encyclopedia=Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy |year=2006}}
</ref>

<ref name=Hutchins>{{cite book |title=Cognition in the Wild |author=Edwin Hutchins |isbn=9780262581462 |year=1996 |page=428 |publisher=MIT Press }} Quoted by {{cite book |title=Cognitive, embodied or enacted? :Contemporary perspectives for HCI and interaction |url=http://trans-techresearch.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Rocha-01.pdf |author=Marcio Rocha |year=2011 |publisher=Transtechnology Research Reader |isbn=978-0-9538332-2-1 |access-date=2014-05-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140524022911/http://trans-techresearch.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Rocha-01.pdf |archive-date=2014-05-24 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

<ref name=Jaegher1>
{{cite book |author1=Ezequiel A Di Paolo |author2=Marieke Rhohde |author3=Hanne De Jaegher |chapter=Horizons for the enactive mind: Values, social interaction, and play |title=Enaction: Toward a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science |editor1=John Stewart |editor2=Oliver Gapenne |editor3=Ezequiel A Di Paolo |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UtFDJx-gysQC&pg=PA39 |pages=33 ''ff'' |isbn= 978-0262526012 |publisher=MIT Press |year=2014}}
</ref>

<ref name=Manetti>A collection of papers on this topic is introduced by {{cite journal |title=Agency: From embodied cognition to free will |author1=Duccio Manetti |author2=Silvano Zipoli Caiani |journal=Humana Mente |volume=15 |date=January 2011 |pages=''V''–''XIII'' |url=http://www.humanamente.eu/PDF/Issue15_CompletePDF.pdf |access-date=2014-05-07 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180409214116/http://www.humanamente.eu/PDF/Issue15_CompletePDF.pdf |archive-date=2018-04-09 |url-status=dead }}</ref>

<ref name=Maturana>
{{cite book |author1=Humberto R Maturana |author2=Francisco J Varela |year=1992 |title= The tree of knowledge: the biological roots of human understanding |edition=Revised |publisher=Shambhala Publications Inc |chapter=Afterword |page=255 |isbn=978-0877736424}}
</ref>

<ref name=Munz>
{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tMuIAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA154 |page=154 |author=Peter Munz |title=Philosophical Darwinism: On the Origin of Knowledge by Means of Natural Selection |year=2002 |isbn=9781134884841 |publisher=Routledge}}
</ref>

<ref name=Mutelesi>
{{cite journal |title=Radical constructivism seen with Edmund Husserl as starting point |author=Edmond Mutelesi |url=http://www.univie.ac.at/constructivism/journal/2/1/006.mutelesi |journal=Constructivist Foundations |volume=2 |issue=1 |pages=6–16 |date=November 15, 2006}}
</ref>

<ref name=Rohde>
{{cite book |title=Enaction, Embodiment, Evolutionary Robotics: Simulation Models for a Post-Cognitivist Science of Mind |chapter= §3.1 The scientist as observing subject |pages=30 ''ff'' |author=Marieke Rohde |isbn=978-9078677239 |publisher=Atlantis Press |year=2010 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LlpZjLMPiHYC&pg=PA30}}
</ref>

<ref name=Rowlands>
{{cite book |author=Mark Rowlands |chapter=Chapter 3: The mind embedded §5 The mind enacted |pages=70 ''ff'' |year=2010 |isbn=978-0262014557 |publisher=MIT Press |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AiwjpL-0hDgC&pg=PA70 |title=The new science of the mind: From extended mind to embodied phenomenology}} Rowlands attributes this idea to {{cite book |author=D M MacKay |year=1967 |chapter=Ways of looking at perception |title=Models for the perception of speech and visual form (Proceedings of a symposium) |editor=W Watthen-Dunn |publisher=MIT Press |pages=25 ''ff'' |isbn=9780262230261 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ts9JAAAAMAAJ&q=MacKay+Ways+of+looking+at+perception}}
</ref>

<ref name=EThompson>
{{cite book |title= Mind in life |chapter=The enactive approach |author=Evan Thompson |isbn=978-0674057517 |edition=Paperback |pages=13 ''ff'' |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OVGna4ZEpWwC&pg=PA13 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2007 }} ToC, first 65 pages, and index
</ref>

<ref name=EThompson2>
{{cite book |title= Mind in life |chapter=Autonomy and emergence |author=Evan Thompson |isbn=978-0674057517 |edition=Paperback |pages=37 ''ff'' |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OVGna4ZEpWwC&pg=PA13 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2007}} See also the Introduction, p. ''x''.
</ref>

<ref name=EThompson3>
{{cite book |title= Mind in life |chapter=Chapter 8: Life beyond the gap |author=Evan Thompson |isbn=978-0674057517 |edition=Paperback |page=225 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OVGna4ZEpWwC&pg=PA225 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2007}}
</ref>

<ref name=EThompson4>
{{cite book |title= Mind in life |chapter=Life can be known only by life |author=Evan Thompson |isbn=978-0674057517 |edition=Paperback |page=165 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OVGna4ZEpWwC&pg=PA165 |publisher=Harvard University Press |year=2007}}
</ref>

<ref name="Evan Thompson">
{{cite book |title=Mind in life:Biology, phenomenology, and the sciences of mind |author=Evan Thompson |chapter-url=http://lchc.ucsd.edu/MCA/Mail/xmcamail.2012_03.dir/pdf3okBxYPBXw.pdf |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn= 978-0674057517 |chapter=Chapter 1: The enactive approach |year=2010}} ToC, first 65 pages, and index .
</ref>

<ref name=Tascano0>
{{cite book |title=A Dictionary of Continental Philosophy |editor=John Protevi |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kRUZ61uISUMC&pg=PA169 |pages=169–170 |chapter = Enaction |isbn=9780300116052 |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2006}}
</ref>

<ref name=Varela>
{{cite book |title=The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience |author1=Francisco J Varela |author2=Evan Thompson |author3=Eleanor Rosch |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QY4RoH2z5DoC |year=1992 |publisher=MIT Press |page=9 |isbn=978-0262261234}}</ref>

<ref name=Ward2>
"The underpinnings of cognition are inextricable from those of affect, that the phenomenon of cognition itself is essentially bound up with affect.." See p. 104: {{cite book |author1=Dave Ward |author2=Mog Stapleton |year=2012 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y1E7FogqvJ0C&pg=PA89 |chapter=Es are good. Cognition as enacted, embodied, embedded, affective and extended |editor= Fabio Paglieri |title=Consciousness in Interaction: The role of the natural and social context in shaping consciousness |publisher=John Benjamins Publishing |pages=89 ''ff'' |isbn=978-9027213525}} .
</ref>

<ref name=RWilson>
{{cite encyclopedia |author1=Robert A Wilson |author2=Lucia Foglia |title=Embodied Cognition: §2.2 Enactive cognition |encyclopedia=The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2017 Edition) |date=25 July 2011 |editor=Edward N. Zalta |url = http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/spr2017/entries/embodied-cognition/#EnaCog}}
</ref>

}}

==Further reading==
* {{cite book |last=Clark |first=Andy |date=2015 |title=Surfing uncertainty: Prediction, action, and the embodied mind |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780190217013 |author-link=Andy Clark }}
* {{cite journal |author1=De Jaegher H. |author2=Di Paolo E. A. | year = 2007 | title = Participatory sense-making: An enactive approach to social cognition | journal = Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences | volume = 6 | issue = 4| pages = 485–507 | doi=10.1007/s11097-007-9076-9|s2cid=142842155 }}
* Di Paolo, E. A., Rohde, M. and De Jaegher, H., (2010). ''Horizons for the Enactive Mind: Values, Social Interaction, and Play.'' In J. Stewart, O. Gapenne and E. A. Di Paolo (eds), Enaction: Towards a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp.&nbsp;33 – 87. {{ISBN|9780262014601}}
*] (2017). ''Enactivist Interventions: Rethinking the Mind.'' Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0198794325}}
* ] (Ed.) (2006). ''Radical Enactivism: Intentionality, phenomenology, and narrative.'' In R. D. Ellis & N. Newton (Series Eds.), ''Consciousness & Emotion, vol. 2.'' {{ISBN|90-272-4151-1}}
* McGann, M. & Torrance, S. (2005). Doing it and meaning it (and the relationship between the two). In R. D. Ellis & N. Newton, ''Consciousness & Emotion, vol. 1: Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception''. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. {{ISBN|1-58811-596-8}}
*] (2005). ''Phenomenology of Perception.'' Routledge. {{ISBN|9780415278416}} (Originally published 1945)
*] (2010). ''Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness.'' Hill and Wang. {{ISBN|978-0809016488}}
* {{cite journal |title=The enactive approach: Theoretical sketches from cell to society |author1=Tom Froese |author2=Ezequiel A DiPaolo |citeseerx = 10.1.1.224.5504 |journal=Pragmatics & Cognition |volume=19 |issue=1 |year=2011 |pages=1–36 |doi=10.1075/pc.19.1.01fro}}
* {{cite journal |author1=Steve Torrance |author2=Tom Froese |title=An inter-enactive approach to agency: participatory sense-making, dynamics, and sociality. |journal=Humana. Mente |volume=15 |year=2011 |pages=21–53 |citeseerx = 10.1.1.187.1151}}
*(fr) Domenico Masciotra (2023). ''Une approche énactive des formations, Théorie et Méthode. En devenir compétent et connaisseur.'' ASCAR Inc.

==External links==
* {{IEP|/enactivism/}}
* {{cite web |title=Consciousness as the emergent property of the interaction between brain, body, & environment: the crucial role of haptic perception |author=Pietro Morasso |url=http://www.consciousness.it/iwac2005/Material/Morasso.pdf |year=2005 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060508002438/http://www.consciousness.it/iwac2005/Material/Morasso.pdf |archive-date=2006-05-08 }} Slides related to a chapter on ] (recognition through touch): {{cite book |editor1=Antonio Chella |editor2=Riccardo Manzotti |author=Pietro Morasso |chapter=Chapter 14: The crucial role of haptic perception |page=234 ''ff'' |title= Artificial Consciousness |publisher= Academic |year=2007 |isbn=978-1845400705 |chapter-url=https://www.google.com/search?q=isbn:1845400704}}
* {{cite web |title=Questioning Life and Cognition: Some Foundational Issues in the Paradigm of Enaction |url=http://www.enactionseries.com/library/bookjs/co/Original_book_JS.html#Pk1qsEYBVxgUwAM6tVeiff |author=John Stewart |work=Enaction Series: Online Collaborative Publishing |editor1=Olivier Gapenne |editor2=Bruno Bachimont |publisher=Enaction Series |access-date=April 27, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140427191657/http://www.enactionseries.com/library/bookjs/co/Original_book_JS.html#Pk1qsEYBVxgUwAM6tVeiff |archive-date=April 27, 2014 |url-status=dead }}
* {{cite web |title=Educational Multimedia Task Force – MM 1045, REPRESENTATION |url=http://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/00/18/64/PDF/REPRDel1.pdf |author1=George-Louis Baron |author2=Eric Bruillard |author3=Christophe Dansac |date=January 1999}} An overview of the rationale and means and methods for the study of representations that the learner constructs in his/her attempt to understand knowledge in a given field. See in particular §1.2.1.4 ''Toward social representations'' (p.&nbsp;24)
* {{cite web |author=Randall Whittaker |year=2001 |title=Autopoiesis and enaction |url=http://www.enolagaia.com/AT.html |publisher=Observer Web |access-date=2014-05-23 |archive-date=2007-08-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070824093246/http://www.enolagaia.com/AT.html |url-status=dead }} An extensive but uncritical introduction to the work of ] and ]
* {{cite journal|title=Enactivism: Arguments & Applications.|journal=Avant|date=Autumn 2014|volume= V| issue = 2/2014|doi=10.12849/50202014.0109.0002|url=http://avant.edu.pl/en/22014-2|access-date=27 November 2014|doi-broken-date=1 November 2024}} Entire journal issue on enactivism's status and current debates.


{{Authority control}}
==Author web pages==
{{reflist |group=AuthorWebPages}}


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Latest revision as of 13:50, 14 December 2024

Philosophical concept
This article contains too many or overly lengthy quotations. Please help summarize the quotations. Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource. (September 2022)

Enactivism is a position in cognitive science that argues that cognition arises through a dynamic interaction between an acting organism and its environment. It claims that the environment of an organism is brought about, or enacted, by the active exercise of that organism's sensorimotor processes. "The key point, then, is that the species brings forth and specifies its own domain of problems ...this domain does not exist "out there" in an environment that acts as a landing pad for organisms that somehow drop or parachute into the world. Instead, living beings and their environments stand in relation to each other through mutual specification or codetermination" (p. 198). "Organisms do not passively receive information from their environments, which they then translate into internal representations. Natural cognitive systems...participate in the generation of meaning ...engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions: they enact a world." These authors suggest that the increasing emphasis upon enactive terminology presages a new era in thinking about cognitive science. How the actions involved in enactivism relate to age-old questions about free will remains a topic of active debate.

The term 'enactivism' is close in meaning to 'enaction', defined as "the manner in which a subject of perception creatively matches its actions to the requirements of its situation". The introduction of the term enaction in this context is attributed to Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch in The Embodied Mind (1991), who proposed the name to "emphasize the growing conviction that cognition is not the representation of a pre-given world by a pre-given mind but is rather the enactment of a world and a mind on the basis of a history of the variety of actions that a being in the world performs". This was further developed by Thompson and others, to place emphasis upon the idea that experience of the world is a result of mutual interaction between the sensorimotor capacities of the organism and its environment. However, some writers maintain that there remains a need for some degree of the mediating function of representation in this new approach to the science of the mind.

The initial emphasis of enactivism upon sensorimotor skills has been criticized as "cognitively marginal", but it has been extended to apply to higher level cognitive activities, such as social interactions. "In the enactive view,... knowledge is constructed: it is constructed by an agent through its sensorimotor interactions with its environment, co-constructed between and within living species through their meaningful interaction with each other. In its most abstract form, knowledge is co-constructed between human individuals in socio-linguistic interactions...Science is a particular form of social knowledge construction... allows us to perceive and predict events beyond our immediate cognitive grasp...and also to construct further, even more powerful scientific knowledge."

Enactivism is closely related to situated cognition and embodied cognition, and is presented as an alternative to cognitivism, computationalism, and Cartesian dualism.

Philosophical aspects

Enactivism is one of a cluster of related theories sometimes known as the 4Es. As described by Mark Rowlands, mental processes are:

  • Embodied involving more than the brain, including a more general involvement of bodily structures and processes.
  • Embedded functioning only in a related external environment.
  • Enacted involving not only neural processes, but also things an organism does.
  • Extended into the organism's environment.

Enactivism proposes an alternative to dualism as a philosophy of mind, in that it emphasises the interactions between mind, body and the environment, seeing them all as inseparably intertwined in mental processes. The self arises as part of the process of an embodied entity interacting with the environment in precise ways determined by its physiology. In this sense, individuals can be seen to "grow into" or arise from their interactive role with the world.

"Enaction is the idea that organisms create their own experience through their actions. Organisms are not passive receivers of input from the environment, but are actors in the environment such that what they experience is shaped by how they act."

In The Tree of Knowledge Maturana & Varela proposed the term enactive "to evoke the view of knowledge that what is known is brought forth, in contraposition to the more classical views of either cognitivism or connectionism. They see enactivism as providing a middle ground between the two extremes of representationalism and solipsism. They seek to "confront the problem of understanding how our existence-the praxis of our living- is coupled to a surrounding world which appears filled with regularities that are at every instant the result of our biological and social histories.... to find a via media: to understand the regularity of the world we are experiencing at every moment, but without any point of reference independent of ourselves that would give certainty to our descriptions and cognitive assertions. Indeed the whole mechanism of generating ourselves, as describers and observers tells us that our world, as the world which we bring forth in our coexistence with others, will always have precisely that mixture of regularity and mutability, that combination of solidity and shifting sand, so typical of human experience when we look at it up close." Another important notion relating to enactivism is autopoiesis. The word refers to a system that is able to reproduce and maintain itself. Maturana & Varela describe that "This was a word without a history, a word that could directly mean what takes place in the dynamics of the autonomy proper to living systems" Using the term autopoiesis, they argue that any closed system that has autonomy, self-reference and self-construction (or, that has autopoietic activities) has cognitive capacities. Therefore, cognition is present in all living systems. This view is also called autopoietic enactivism.

Radical enactivism is another form of enactivist view of cognition. Radical enactivists often adopt a thoroughly non-representational, enactive account of basic cognition. Basic cognitive capacities mentioned by Hutto and Myin include perceiving, imagining and remembering. They argue that those forms of basic cognition can be explained without positing mental representations. With regard to complex forms of cognition such as language, they think mental representations are needed, because there needs explanations of content. In human being's public practices, they claim that "such intersubjective practices and sensitivity to the relevant norms comes with the mastery of the use of public symbol systems" (2017, p. 120), and so "as it happens, this appears only to have occurred in full form with construction of sociocultural cognitive niches in the human lineage" (2017, p. 134). They conclude that basic cognition as well as cognition in simple organisms such as bacteria are best characterized as non-representational.

Enactivism also addresses the hard problem of consciousness, referred to by Thompson as part of the explanatory gap in explaining how consciousness and subjective experience are related to brain and body. "The problem with the dualistic concepts of consciousness and life in standard formulations of the hard problem is that they exclude each other by construction". Instead, according to Thompson's view of enactivism, the study of consciousness or phenomenology as exemplified by Husserl and Merleau-Ponty is to complement science and its objectification of the world. "The whole universe of science is built upon the world as directly experienced, and if we want to subject science itself to rigorous scrutiny and arrive at a precise assessment of its meaning and scope, we must begin by reawakening the basic experience of the world of which science is the second-order expression" (Merleau-Ponty, The phenomenology of perception as quoted by Thompson, p. 165). In this interpretation, enactivism asserts that science is formed or enacted as part of humankind's interactivity with its world, and by embracing phenomenology "science itself is properly situated in relation to the rest of human life and is thereby secured on a sounder footing."

Enaction has been seen as a move to conjoin representationalism with phenomenalism, that is, as adopting a constructivist epistemology, an epistemology centered upon the active participation of the subject in constructing reality. However, 'constructivism' focuses upon more than a simple 'interactivity' that could be described as a minor adjustment to 'assimilate' reality or 'accommodate' to it. Constructivism looks upon interactivity as a radical, creative, revisionist process in which the knower constructs a personal 'knowledge system' based upon their experience and tested by its viability in practical encounters with their environment. Learning is a result of perceived anomalies that produce dissatisfaction with existing conceptions.

Shaun Gallagher also points out that pragmatism is a forerunner of enactive and extended approaches to cognition. According to him, enactive conceptions of cognition can be found in many pragmatists such as Charles Sanders Peirce and John Dewey. For example, Dewey says that "The brain is essentially an organ for effecting the reciprocal adjustment to each other of the stimuli received from the environment and responses directed upon it" (1916, pp. 336–337). This view is fully consistent with enactivist arguments that cognition is not just a matter of brain processes and brain is one part of the body consisting of the dynamical regulation. Robert Brandom, a neo-pragmatist, comments that "A founding idea of pragmatism is that the most fundamental kind of intentionality (in the sense of directedness towards objects) is the practical involvement with objects exhibited by a sentient creature dealing skillfully with its world" (2008, p. 178).

How does constructivism relate to enactivism? From the above remarks it can be seen that Glasersfeld expresses an interactivity between the knower and the known quite acceptable to an enactivist, but does not emphasize the structured probing of the environment by the knower that leads to the "perturbation relative to some expected result" that then leads to a new understanding. It is this probing activity, especially where it is not accidental but deliberate, that characterizes enaction, and invokes affect, that is, the motivation and planning that lead to doing and to fashioning the probing, both observing and modifying the environment, so that "perceptions and nature condition one another through generating one another." The questioning nature of this probing activity is not an emphasis of Piaget and Glasersfeld.

Sharing enactivism's stress upon both action and embodiment in the incorporation of knowledge, but giving Glasersfeld's mechanism of viability an evolutionary emphasis, is evolutionary epistemology. Inasmuch as an organism must reflect its environment well enough for the organism to be able to survive in it, and to be competitive enough to be able to reproduce at sustainable rate, the structure and reflexes of the organism itself embody knowledge of its environment. This biology-inspired theory of the growth of knowledge is closely tied to universal Darwinism, and is associated with evolutionary epistemologists such as Karl Popper, Donald T. Campbell, Peter Munz, and Gary Cziko. According to Munz, "an organism is an embodied theory about its environment... Embodied theories are also no longer expressed in language, but in anatomical structures or reflex responses, etc."

One objection to enactive approaches to cognition is the so-called "scale-up objection". According to this objection, enactive theories only have limited value because they cannot "scale up" to explain more complex cognitive capacities like human thoughts. Those phenomena are extremely difficult to explain without positing representation. But recently, some philosophers are trying to respond to such objection. For example, Adrian Downey (2020) provides a non-representational account of Obsessive-compulsive disorder, and then argues that ecological-enactive approaches can respond to the "scaling up" objection.

Psychological aspects

McGann & others argue that enactivism attempts to mediate between the explanatory role of the coupling between cognitive agent and environment and the traditional emphasis on brain mechanisms found in neuroscience and psychology. In the interactive approach to social cognition developed by De Jaegher & others, the dynamics of interactive processes are seen to play significant roles in coordinating interpersonal understanding, processes that in part include what they call participatory sense-making. Recent developments of enactivism in the area of social neuroscience involve the proposal of The Interactive Brain Hypothesis where social cognition brain mechanisms, even those used in non-interactive situations, are proposed to have interactive origins.

Enactive views of perception

In the enactive view, perception "is not conceived as the transmission of information but more as an exploration of the world by various means. Cognition is not tied into the workings of an 'inner mind', some cognitive core, but occurs in directed interaction between the body and the world it inhabits."

Alva Noë in advocating an enactive view of perception sought to resolve how we perceive three-dimensional objects, on the basis of two-dimensional input. He argues that we perceive this solidity (or 'volumetricity') by appealing to patterns of sensorimotor expectations. These arise from our agent-active 'movements and interaction' with objects, or 'object-active' changes in the object itself. The solidity is perceived through our expectations and skills in knowing how the object's appearance would change with changes in how we relate to it. He saw all perception as an active exploration of the world, rather than being a passive process, something which happens to us.

Noë's idea of the role of 'expectations' in three-dimensional perception has been opposed by several philosophers, notably by Andy Clark. Clark points to difficulties of the enactive approach. He points to internal processing of visual signals, for example, in the ventral and dorsal pathways, the two-streams hypothesis. This results in an integrated perception of objects (their recognition and location, respectively) yet this processing cannot be described as an action or actions. In a more general criticism, Clark suggests that perception is not a matter of expectations about sensorimotor mechanisms guiding perception. Rather, although the limitations of sensorimotor mechanisms constrain perception, this sensorimotor activity is drastically filtered to fit current needs and purposes of the organism, and it is these imposed 'expectations' that govern perception, filtering for the 'relevant' details of sensorimotor input (called "sensorimotor summarizing").

These sensorimotor-centered and purpose-centered views appear to agree on the general scheme but disagree on the dominance issue – is the dominant component peripheral or central. Another view, the closed-loop perception one, assigns equal a-priori dominance to the peripheral and central components. In closed-loop perception, perception emerges through the process of inclusion of an item in a motor-sensory-motor loop, i.e., a loop (or loops) connecting the peripheral and central components that are relevant to that item. The item can be a body part (in which case the loops are in steady-state) or an external object (in which case the loops are perturbed and gradually converge to a steady state). These enactive loops are always active, switching dominance by the need.

Another application of enaction to perception is analysis of the human hand. The many remarkably demanding uses of the hand are not learned by instruction, but through a history of engagements that lead to the acquisition of skills. According to one interpretation, it is suggested that "the hand ...an organ of cognition", not a faithful subordinate working under top-down instruction, but a partner in a "bi-directional interplay between manual and brain activity." According to Daniel Hutto: "Enactivists are concerned to defend the view that our most elementary ways of engaging with the world and others - including our basic forms of perception and perceptual experience - are mindful in the sense of being phenomenally charged and intentionally directed, despite being non-representational and content-free." Hutto calls this position 'REC' (Radical Enactive Cognition): "According to REC, there is no way to distinguish neural activity that is imagined to be genuinely content involving (and thus truly mental, truly cognitive) from other non-neural activity that merely plays a supporting or enabling role in making mind and cognition possible."

Participatory sense-making

Hanne De Jaegher and Ezequiel Di Paolo (2007) have extended the enactive concept of sense-making into the social domain. The idea takes as its departure point the process of interaction between individuals in a social encounter. De Jaegher and Di Paolo argue that the interaction process itself can take on a form of autonomy (operationally defined). This allows them to define social cognition as the generation of meaning and its transformation through interacting individuals.

The notion of participatory sense-making has led to the proposal that interaction processes can sometimes play constitutive roles in social cognition (De Jaegher, Di Paolo, Gallagher, 2010). It has been applied to research in social neuroscience and autism.

In a similar vein, "an inter-enactive approach to agency holds that the behavior of agents in a social situation unfolds not only according to their individual abilities and goals, but also according to the conditions and constraints imposed by the autonomous dynamics of the interaction process itself". According to Torrance, enactivism involves five interlocking themes related to the question "What is it to be a (cognizing, conscious) agent?" It is:

1. to be a biologically autonomous (autopoietic) organism
2. to generate significance or meaning, rather than to act via...updated internal representations of the external world
3. to engage in sense-making via dynamic coupling with the environment
4. to 'enact' or 'bring forth' a world of significances by mutual co-determination of the organism with its enacted world
5. to arrive at an experiential awareness via lived embodiment in the world.

Torrance adds that "many kinds of agency, in particular the agency of human beings, cannot be understood separately from understanding the nature of the interaction that occurs between agents." That view introduces the social applications of enactivism. "Social cognition is regarded as the result of a special form of action, namely social interaction...the enactive approach looks at the circular dynamic within a dyad of embodied agents."

In cultural psychology, enactivism is seen as a way to uncover cultural influences upon feeling, thinking and acting. Baerveldt and Verheggen argue that "It appears that seemingly natural experience is thoroughly intertwined with sociocultural realities." They suggest that the social patterning of experience is to be understood through enactivism, "the idea that the reality we have in common, and in which we find ourselves, is neither a world that exists independently from us, nor a socially shared way of representing such a pregiven world, but a world itself brought forth by our ways of communicating and our joint action....The world we inhabit is manufactured of 'meaning' rather than 'information'.

Luhmann attempted to apply Maturana and Varela's notion of autopoiesis to social systems. "A core concept of social systems theory is derived from biological systems theory: the concept of autopoiesis. Chilean biologist Humberto Maturana come up with the concept to explain how biological systems such as cells are a product of their own production." "Systems exist by way of operational closure and this means that they each construct themselves and their own realities."

Educational aspects

The first definition of enaction was introduced by psychologist Jerome Bruner, who introduced enaction as 'learning by doing' in his discussion of how children learn, and how they can best be helped to learn. He associated enaction with two other ways of knowledge organization: Iconic and Symbolic.

"Any domain of knowledge (or any problem within that domain of knowledge) can be represented in three ways: by a set of actions appropriate for achieving a certain result (enactive representation); by a set of summary images or graphics that stand for a concept without defining it fully (iconic representation); and by a set of symbolic or logical propositions drawn from a symbolic system that is governed by rules or laws for forming and transforming propositions (symbolic representation)"

The term 'enactive framework' was elaborated upon by Francisco Varela and Humberto Maturana.

Sriramen argues that enactivism provides "a rich and powerful explanatory theory for learning and being." and that it is closely related to both the ideas of cognitive development of Piaget, and also the social constructivism of Vygotsky. Piaget focused on the child's immediate environment, and suggested cognitive structures like spatial perception emerge as a result of the child's interaction with the world. According to Piaget, children construct knowledge, using what they know in new ways and testing it, and the environment provides feedback concerning the adequacy of their construction. In a cultural context, Vygotsky suggested that the kind of cognition that can take place is not dictated by the engagement of the isolated child, but is also a function of social interaction and dialogue that is contingent upon a sociohistorical context. Enactivism in educational theory "looks at each learning situation as a complex system consisting of teacher, learner, and context, all of which frame and co-create the learning situation." Enactivism in education is very closely related to situated cognition, which holds that "knowledge is situated, being in part a product of the activity, context, and culture in which it is developed and used." This approach challenges the "separating of what is learned from how it is learned and used."

Artificial intelligence aspects

Main article: Enactive interfaces

The ideas of enactivism regarding how organisms engage with their environment have interested those involved in robotics and man-machine interfaces. The analogy is drawn that a robot can be designed to interact and learn from its environment in a manner similar to the way an organism does, and a human can interact with a computer-aided design tool or data base using an interface that creates an enactive environment for the user, that is, all the user's tactile, auditory, and visual capabilities are enlisted in a mutually explorative engagement, capitalizing upon all the user's abilities, and not at all limited to cerebral engagement. In these areas it is common to refer to affordances as a design concept, the idea that an environment or an interface affords opportunities for enaction, and good design involves optimizing the role of such affordances.

The activity in the AI community has influenced enactivism as a whole. Referring extensively to modeling techniques for evolutionary robotics by Beer, the modeling of learning behavior by Kelso, and to modeling of sensorimotor activity by Saltzman, McGann, De Jaegher, and Di Paolo discuss how this work makes the dynamics of coupling between an agent and its environment, the foundation of enactivism, "an operational, empirically observable phenomenon." That is, the AI environment invents examples of enactivism using concrete examples that, although not as complex as living organisms, isolate and illuminate basic principles.

Mathematical formalisms

Main article: artificial general intelligence

Enactive cognition has been formalised in order to address subjectivity in artificial general intelligence.

A mathematical formalism of AGI is an agent proven to maximise a measure of intelligence. Prior to 2022, the only such formalism was AIXI, which maximised “the ability to satisfy goals in a wide range of environments”. In 2015 Jan Lieke and Marcus Hutter showed that "Legg-Hutter intelligence is measured with respect to a fixed UTM. AIXI is the most intelligent policy if it uses the same UTM", a result which "undermines all existing optimality properties for AIXI", rendering them subjective.

Criticism

One of the essential theses of this approach is that biological systems generate meanings, i.e. they are semiotic systems, engaging in transformational and not merely informational interactions. Since this thesis raised the problems of beginning cognition for organisms in the developmental stage of only simple reflexes (the binding problem and the problem of primary data entry), enactivists proposed the concept of embodied information that serves to start cognition. However, critics highlight that this idea requires introducing the nature of intentionality before engaging embodied information. In a natural environment, the stimulus-reaction pair (causation) is unpredictable due to many irrelevant stimuli claiming to be randomly associated with the embodied information. While embodied information is only beneficial when intentionality is already in place, enactivists introduced the notion of the generation of meanings by biological systems (engaging in transformational interactions) without introducing a neurophysiological basis of intentionality.

See also

Notes

  1. Cognition as information processing like that of a digital computer. From Evan Thompson (2010-09-30). Mind in Life. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674057517. Cognitivism, p. 4; See also Steven Horst (December 10, 2009). "The computational theory of mind". In Edward N. Zalta (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 Edition).
  2. Cognition as emergent patterns of activity in a neural network. From Evan Thompson (2010-09-30). Mind in Life. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674057517. Connectionism, p. 8; See also James Garson (July 27, 2010). Edward N. Zalta (ed.). "Connectionism". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2011 Edition).

References

  1. ^ Evan Thompson (2010). "Chapter 1: The enactive approach" (PDF). Mind in life:Biology, phenomenology, and the sciences of mind. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674057517. ToC, first 65 pages, and index found here.
  2. ^ Francisco J Varela; Evan Thompson; Eleanor Rosch (1992). The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience. MIT Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0262261234.
  3. ^ Ezequiel A Di Paolo; Marieke Rhohde; Hanne De Jaegher (2014). "Horizons for the enactive mind: Values, social interaction, and play". In John Stewart; Oliver Gapenne; Ezequiel A Di Paolo (eds.). Enaction: Toward a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science. MIT Press. pp. 33 ff. ISBN 978-0262526012.
  4. A collection of papers on this topic is introduced by Duccio Manetti; Silvano Zipoli Caiani (January 2011). "Agency: From embodied cognition to free will" (PDF). Humana Mente. 15: VXIII. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-04-09. Retrieved 2014-05-07.
  5. ^ John Protevi, ed. (2006). "Enaction". A Dictionary of Continental Philosophy. Yale University Press. pp. 169–170. ISBN 9780300116052.
  6. ^ Robert A Wilson; Lucia Foglia (25 July 2011). "Embodied Cognition: §2.2 Enactive cognition". In Edward N. Zalta (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2017 Edition).
  7. Mark Rowlands (2010). "Chapter 3: The mind embedded §5 The mind enacted". The new science of the mind: From extended mind to embodied phenomenology. MIT Press. pp. 70 ff. ISBN 978-0262014557. Rowlands attributes this idea to D M MacKay (1967). "Ways of looking at perception". In W Watthen-Dunn (ed.). Models for the perception of speech and visual form (Proceedings of a symposium). MIT Press. pp. 25 ff. ISBN 9780262230261.
  8. Andy Clark; Josefa Toribio (1994). "Doing without representing" (PDF). Synthese. 101 (3): 401–434. doi:10.1007/bf01063896. hdl:1842/1301. S2CID 17136030.
  9. Marieke Rohde (2010). "§3.1 The scientist as observing subject". Enaction, Embodiment, Evolutionary Robotics: Simulation Models for a Post-Cognitivist Science of Mind. Atlantis Press. pp. 30 ff. ISBN 978-9078677239.
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Further reading

  • Clark, Andy (2015). Surfing uncertainty: Prediction, action, and the embodied mind. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190217013.
  • De Jaegher H.; Di Paolo E. A. (2007). "Participatory sense-making: An enactive approach to social cognition". Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences. 6 (4): 485–507. doi:10.1007/s11097-007-9076-9. S2CID 142842155.
  • Di Paolo, E. A., Rohde, M. and De Jaegher, H., (2010). Horizons for the Enactive Mind: Values, Social Interaction, and Play. In J. Stewart, O. Gapenne and E. A. Di Paolo (eds), Enaction: Towards a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, pp. 33 – 87. ISBN 9780262014601
  • Gallagher, Shaun (2017). Enactivist Interventions: Rethinking the Mind. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0198794325
  • Hutto, D. D. (Ed.) (2006). Radical Enactivism: Intentionality, phenomenology, and narrative. In R. D. Ellis & N. Newton (Series Eds.), Consciousness & Emotion, vol. 2. ISBN 90-272-4151-1
  • McGann, M. & Torrance, S. (2005). Doing it and meaning it (and the relationship between the two). In R. D. Ellis & N. Newton, Consciousness & Emotion, vol. 1: Agency, conscious choice, and selective perception. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. ISBN 1-58811-596-8
  • Merleau-Ponty, Maurice (2005). Phenomenology of Perception. Routledge. ISBN 9780415278416 (Originally published 1945)
  • Noë, Alva (2010). Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain, and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness. Hill and Wang. ISBN 978-0809016488
  • Tom Froese; Ezequiel A DiPaolo (2011). "The enactive approach: Theoretical sketches from cell to society". Pragmatics & Cognition. 19 (1): 1–36. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.224.5504. doi:10.1075/pc.19.1.01fro.
  • Steve Torrance; Tom Froese (2011). "An inter-enactive approach to agency: participatory sense-making, dynamics, and sociality". Humana. Mente. 15: 21–53. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.187.1151.
  • (fr) Domenico Masciotra (2023). Une approche énactive des formations, Théorie et Méthode. En devenir compétent et connaisseur. ASCAR Inc.

External links

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