Book Chapter
Details
Citation
Anderson M (2018) Shakespeare and the Mind. In: Bourne C & Caddick Bourne E (eds.) The Routledge Companion to Shakespeare and Philosophy. Routledge Philosophy Companions. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 436-53. https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Companion-to-Shakespeare-and-Philosophy/Bourne-Bourne/p/book/9781138936126
Abstract
What is the mind? Often nowadays the mind and the brain are presented as identical. Distributed cognition is one term for the idea that cognition is not merely brain-based, but instead is distributed across brain, body and world. Over the last 3 decades cognitive scientific and philosophical research has emerged, with overlapping and sometimes competing theories emphasising different aspects of the ways in which cognitive processes can be distributed. However, the notion that cognition is distributed is not new. Distributed cognition was the most prevalent way of thinking about the mind in the Renaissance, though expression of the paradigm is historically situated and culturally inflected. This essay outlines current notions of distributed cognition, the expression of these ideas in the Renaissance, and the exploration of them in Shakespeare’s works. Furthermore, it considers a few of the ways in which insights into the distributed nature of cognition offer a new way of understanding what is happening when we read a book or see a play performed. Literature is the most wonderful of human cognitive resources, a mind tool, and though as with any tool its ends may not always be virtuous, the very means by which it operates, such as widening one’s conceptual range and enabling more vivid insights into other minds, necessarily tend to the improvement of the partaker.
Status | Published |
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Funders | |
Title of series | Routledge Philosophy Companions |
Publication date | 26/10/2018 |
Publication date online | 26/10/2018 |
Publisher | Routledge |
Publisher URL | |
Place of publication | Abingdon |
ISBN | 9781138936126 |