Article contents
Tinkering with cognitive gadgets: Cultural evolutionary psychology meets active inference
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2019
Abstract
Cognitive Gadgets offers a new, convincing perspective on the origins of our distinctive cognitive faculties, coupled with a clear, innovative research program. Although we broadly endorse Heyes’ ideas, we raise some concerns about her characterisation of evolutionary psychology and the relationship between biology and culture, before discussing the potential fruits of examining cognitive gadgets through the lens of active inference.
- Type
- Open Peer Commentary
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019
References
- 2
- Cited by
Target article
Précis of Cognitive Gadgets: The Cultural Evolution of Thinking
Related commentaries (17)
Cognitive gadgets and cognitive priors
Cognitive gadgets and genetic accommodation
Cognitive gadgets: A provocative but flawed manifesto
Could nonhuman great apes also have cultural evolutionary psychology?
Cultural evolutionary psychology is still evolutionary psychology
Culture in the world shapes culture in the head (and vice versa)
Executive functions are cognitive gadgets
How is mindreading really like reading?
Imitation: Neither instinct nor gadget, but a cultural starting point?
Instincts or gadgets? Not the debate we should be having
Keeping cultural in cultural evolutionary psychology: Culture shapes indigenous psychologies in specific ecologies
Language is not a gadget
Mending wall
Mills made of grist, and other interesting ideas in need of clarification
Sociocultural memory development research drives new directions in gadgetry science
Tinkering with cognitive gadgets: Cultural evolutionary psychology meets active inference
Twenty questions about cultural cognitive gadgets
Author response
Cognition blindness and cognitive gadgets