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First Person Singular: Review of Brian Rotman's "Becoming Beside Ourselves: Alphabet, ghosts, distributed human beings"

Harnad, Stevan (2008). « First Person Singular: Review of Brian Rotman's "Becoming Beside Ourselves: Alphabet, ghosts, distributed human beings" ». Times Literary Supplement

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Brian Rotman argues that (one) “mind” and (one) “god” are only conceivable, literally, because of (alphabetic) literacy, which allowed us to designate each of these ghosts as an incorporeal, speaker-independent “I” (or, in the case of infinity, a notional agent that goes on counting forever). I argue that to have a mind is to have the capacity to feel. No one can be sure which organisms feel, hence have minds, but it seems likely that one-celled organisms and plants do not, whereas animals do. So minds originated before humans and before language --hence, a fortiori, before writing, whether alphabetic or ideographic.

Type de document : Article/revue culturelle
Évaluation par des pairs : Non
État du document : Accepté
Mots-clés : langage, conscience, ecriture, esprit, test de Turing
Unité d'appartenance : Faculté des sciences humaines > Département de psychologie
Instituts > Institut des sciences cognitives (ISC)
Code ID : 920
Déposé par : Stevan Harnad
Déposé le : 27 août 2008
Dernière modification : 20 avr. 2009 10:33

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UQAM - Université du Québec à Montréal  ›  Mise à jour : 17 avril 2009