No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Have we lost the thinker in other minds? Human thinking beyond social norms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2020
Abstract
Veissière and colleagues suggest that thinking is entirely based on social norms. I point out that despite the fact that social norms are commonly used to alleviate cognitive processing, some individuals are willing and able to go about the costly process of questioning them and exploring other valuable ways of thinking.
- Type
- Open Peer Commentary
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press
Target article
Thinking through other minds: A variational approach to cognition and culture
Related commentaries (29)
A deeper and distributed search for culture
A unified account of culture should accommodate animal cultures
Affective Social Learning serves as a quick and flexible complement to TTOM
Choosing a Markov blanket
Culture and the plasticity of perception
Digital life, a theory of minds, and mapping human and machine cultural universals
Enculturation without TTOM and Bayesianism without FEP: Another Bayesian theory of culture is needed
Encultured minds, not error reduction minds
Explaining or redefining mindreading?
Have we lost the thinker in other minds? Human thinking beyond social norms
How does social cognition shape enculturation?
Importance of the “thinking through other minds” process explored through motor correlates of motivated social interactions
Integrating models of cognition and culture will require a bit more math
Maladaptive social norms, cultural progress, and the free-energy principle
Normativity, social change, and the epistemological framing of culture
Participating in a musician's stream of consciousness
Skill-based engagement with a rich landscape of affordances as an alternative to thinking through other minds
Social epistemic actions
The cost of over-intellectualizing the free-energy principle
The dark side of thinking through other minds
The future of TTOM
The multicultural mind as an epistemological test and extension for the thinking through other minds approach
The role of communication in acquisition, curation, and transmission of culture
Thinking with other minds
Thinking through others’ emotions: Incorporating the role of emotional state inference in thinking through other minds
Thinking through prior bodies: autonomic uncertainty and interoceptive self-inference
Unification at the cost of realism and precision
“Social physiology” for psychiatric semiology: How TTOM can initiate an interactive turn for computational psychiatry?
“Through others we become ourselves”: The dialectics of predictive coding and active inference
Author response
TTOM in action: Refining the variational approach to cognition and culture