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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2009

The Social Brain: a Spinozist Reconstruction

Résumé

The sciences of cognition, going back to the early days of the Artificial Intelligence movement in the 1950s, were typically viewed with profound suspicion or distaste by thinkers, Marxist and other, for whom the embeddedness of human beings in the symbolic realm of representations and values was a sine qua non condition of any legitimate theory – whether ethical, political, metaphysical. Attempts to locate mind and action within the natural world studied by the natural sciences, in this case by neuroscience, were viewed as at best conceptual justifications for de-humanizing, secret military projects. The fact that in recent years the sciences of cognition have had a 'social turn' (" social cognition, " " social neuroscience, " " affective neuroscience, " " collective intentionality " and so forth) does little to assuage the fears of the engagé, anti-naturalist thinker. In contrast, I propose a historic-philosophical reconstruction of a 'Spinozist' tradition which locates the brain within the broader network of relations, including social relations. This tradition runs from Spinoza to Marx and Lev Vygotski in the early 20 th century, and on to Toni Negri and Paolo Virno in recent European philosophy, as a new perspective on the brain. The concept of social brain that is articulated in this reconstruction – some early-20 th century Soviet neuropsychologists spoke of the " socialist cortex " – overcomes distinctions between Continental thought and the philosophy of mind (and its ancillary, cognitive science), and possibly gives a new metaphysical framework for social cognition.

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hal-01233165 , version 1 (04-12-2015)

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Charles T. Wolfe. The Social Brain: a Spinozist Reconstruction. ASCS 2009, John Sutton et al, Sep 2009, Sydney, Australia. ⟨10.5096/ASCS200956⟩. ⟨hal-01233165⟩
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