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      Creativethinging : Thefeeling ofandfor clay

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      Pragmatics & Cognition
      John Benjamins Publishing Company

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          Abstract

          Humans are organisms of a creative sort. We make new things that scaffold the ecology of our minds, shape the boundaries of our thinking and form new ways to engage and make sense of the world. That is, we are creative ‘thingers’. This paper adopts the perspective of Material Engagement Theory (Malafouris 2013) and introduces the notion ‘thinging’ to articulate and draw attention to the kind of cognitive life instantiated in acts of thinking and feeling with, through and about things. I will focus more specifically on Creative thinging, or creative material engagement, exploring the importance of thinging for understanding our species unique capacity for inventiveness.

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          Creativity.

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            Supersizing the Mind : Embodiment, Action, and Cognitive Extension

            Andy Clark (2008)
            Studies of mind, thought, and reason have tended to marginalize the role of bodily form, real-world action, and environmental backdrop. In recent years, both in philosophy and cognitive science, this tendency has been identified and, increasingly, resisted. The result is a plethora of work on what has become known as embodied, situated, distributed, and even ‘extended’ cognition. Work in this new, loosely-knit field depicts thought and reason as in some way inextricably tied to the details of our gross bodily form, our habits of action and intervention, and the enabling web of social, cultural, and technological scaffolding in which we live, move, learn, and think. But exactly what kind of link is at issue? And what difference might such a link or links make to our best philosophical, psychological, and computational models of thought and reason? These are among the large unsolved problems in this increasingly popular field. This book offers both a tour of the emerging landscape, and an argument in favour of one approach to the key issues. That approach combines the use of representational, computational, and information-theoretic tools with an appreciation of the importance of context, timing, biomechanics, and dynamics. More controversially, it depicts some coalitions of biological and non-biological resources as the extended cognitive circuitry of individual minds.
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              Radical Embodied Cognitive Science

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Pragmatics & Cognition
                P&C
                John Benjamins Publishing Company
                0929-0907
                1569-9943
                December 31 2014
                December 7 2015
                December 31 2014
                : 22
                : 1
                : 140-158
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of Oxford
                Article
                10.1075/pc.22.1.08mal
                7689367b-7431-4e51-bf1b-90acb7135834
                © 2014
                History

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