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‎1.3.1.

1 REPRESENTATIONS  53

‎ASSOCIATIVE

‎ CTIVATION OF AN OPERATION BETWEEN


A
‎AT LEAST TWO REPRESENTATIONS

‎RULE-BASED

‎ PPLICATION OF AN ABSTRACT RULE TO


A
‎REPRESENTATIONS

‎VERTICAL COMPLEXITY ‎ INGLE-INPUT OPERATIONS TAKE A


S
‎SINGLE INPUT TO PRODUCE THEIR OUTPUT
‎ CTIVITIES CARRIED OUT ON
A ‎ UMBER OF INPUTS THAT AN OPERATION
N
‎REPRESENTATIONS ‎INTEGRATES SIMULTANEOUSLY ‎ ULTIPLE-INPUT OPERATIONS (
M
‎CONSTRUCTIVE OPERATIONS), TAKE TWO
‎1.3.1.2 OPERATIONS ‎OR MORE INPUTS TO PRODUCE THEIR
‎OUTPUT
‎WITH REGARD TO THEIR COMPLEXITY
‎HORIZONTAL COMPLEXITY

‎ UMBER OF SEQUENTIAL STEPS THAT


N
1‎ .3.1 MENTAL MECHANISTIC ‎MUST BE CARRIED OUT TO ARRIVE AT AN
‎EXPLANATIONS ‎OUTPUT

‎ hey relay on outputs that were preset


T ‎ HYLOGENESIS (i.e., the evolution of the
P
‎PRIMARY PROCESSES ARE INNATE
‎during PHYLOGENESIS ‎species)

‎ ITH REGARD OF WHETHER THE OUTPUT


W ‎ hey rely on outputs that were preset
T ‎ NTOGENESIS (i.e., the evolution of the
O
‎OF THE OPERATION WAS PRESET OR IS ‎SECONDARY PROCESSES ARE LEARNED
‎during ONTOGENESIS ‎individual)
‎NOVEL

‎ hey can use raw stimulus input or preset


T
‎ ERTIARY PROCESSES ARE
T (‎ MICROGENESIS (i.e., the evolution of some
‎representations but their output is freshly
‎COMPUTATIONS ‎process in real time)
‎produced during MICROGENESIS

‎AUTOMATIC PROCESSES

‎Fast, efficient, and unintentional, but


‎ URATION, INTENSITY, GOAL RELEVANCE,
D
‎ nly a small subset of these factors (
O ‎difficult to counteract and unconscious
‎UN/EXPECTEDNESS OF THE INPUT,
‎DURATION / TIME, ATTENTION, &
‎AMOUNT OF ATTENTION DIRECTED AT
‎INTENTION) has been linked to the ‎NON-AUTOMATIC PROCESSES
‎THE INPUT, RECENCY AND FREQUENCY
‎dichotomy between AUTOMATIC & NON-
‎ actors that count as conditions under
F ‎OF THE INPUT, AND THE GOAL TO ENGAGE
‎AUTOMATIC PROCESSES
1‎ .3 TYPES OF ‎which a process can operate or influence ‎IN THE PROCESSING OF THE INPUT ‎Opposite features
‎the strenght of a process
‎EXPLANATION AND 
I‎ nputs and outputs MUST BE
‎LEVELS OF ANALYSIS 1‎ .3.1.3 OPERATING CONDITIONS AND
‎AUTOMATICITY FEATURES
‎REPRESENTATIONS and they must be
‎situated in a HIGH LEVEL OF ANALYSIS

‎CONSCIOUSNESS
‎ HILOSOPHERS sometimes uses the terms
P
‎PERSONAL-LEVEL vs. SUBPERSONAL-
‎ eing CONSCIOUS of a process requires
B
‎LEVEL to refer to CONSCIOUS vs.
‎being conscious of the input & the output
‎UNCONSCIOUS processes
‎of the process as well as of their
‎interrelation
‎QUALIA

‎ he phenomenal aspect consists of the


T
I‎ N CONSCIOUS REPRESENTATIONS this ‎QUALIA or the NON-REPRESENTATIONAL
‎ oth conscious and unconscious
B
‎INTENTIONAL aspect is combined with a ‎CONTENT OF THE EXPERIENCE, the aspect
‎representations HAVE INTENTIONALITY
‎PHENOMENAL ASPECT ‎of the experience that remains after the
‎intentional aspect is stripped away

‎NEURAL REPRESENTATIONS

‎ ARTS & ACTIVITIES correspond to


P
1‎ .3.2 NEURAL MECHANISTIC ‎ opulations or patterns of FIRING
P
‎NEURAL REPRESENTATIONS & NEURAL
‎EXPLANATIONS ‎NEURONS
‎OPERATIONS

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