{"title":"超越牛顿:为什么普遍性假设对认知科学至关重要,以及如何最终超越它们。","authors":"Ivan Kroupin, Helen E Davis, Joseph Henrich","doi":"10.1037/rev0000480","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Cognitive science is a study of human universals. This assumption, which we will refer to as the Newtonian principle (NP), explicitly or implicitly pervades the theory, methods, and prose of most cognitive research. This is despite at least half a century of sustained critique by cross-cultural and anthropologically oriented researchers and glaring counterexamples such as the study of literacy. We argue that a key reason for this intransigence is that the NP solves the boundary problem of cognitive science. Since studying the idiosyncratic cognitive features of an individual is not a generalizable scientific enterprise, what scale of generalization in cognitive science is legitimate and interesting? The NP solution is a priori-only findings generalizing to all humans are legitimate. This approach is clearly flawed; however, critiques of the NP fail to provide any alternative solution. In fact, some anti-NP branches of research have abandoned generalizability altogether. Sailing between the scylla and charybdis of NP and hermeneutics, we propose an explicit, alternative solution to the boundary problem. Namely, building on many previous efforts, we combine cultural-evolutionary theory with a newly defined principle of articulation. This framework requires work on any given cognitive feature to explicitly hypothesize the universal or group-specific environments in which it emerges. Doing so shifts the question of legitimate generalizability from flawed, a priori assumptions to being a target of explicit claims and theorizing. Moreover, the articulation framework allows us to integrate existing findings across research traditions and motivates a range of future directions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":21016,"journal":{"name":"Psychological review","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":5.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Beyond Newton: Why assumptions of universality are critical to cognitive science, and how to finally move past them.\",\"authors\":\"Ivan Kroupin, Helen E Davis, Joseph Henrich\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/rev0000480\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Cognitive science is a study of human universals. This assumption, which we will refer to as the Newtonian principle (NP), explicitly or implicitly pervades the theory, methods, and prose of most cognitive research. This is despite at least half a century of sustained critique by cross-cultural and anthropologically oriented researchers and glaring counterexamples such as the study of literacy. We argue that a key reason for this intransigence is that the NP solves the boundary problem of cognitive science. Since studying the idiosyncratic cognitive features of an individual is not a generalizable scientific enterprise, what scale of generalization in cognitive science is legitimate and interesting? The NP solution is a priori-only findings generalizing to all humans are legitimate. This approach is clearly flawed; however, critiques of the NP fail to provide any alternative solution. In fact, some anti-NP branches of research have abandoned generalizability altogether. Sailing between the scylla and charybdis of NP and hermeneutics, we propose an explicit, alternative solution to the boundary problem. Namely, building on many previous efforts, we combine cultural-evolutionary theory with a newly defined principle of articulation. This framework requires work on any given cognitive feature to explicitly hypothesize the universal or group-specific environments in which it emerges. Doing so shifts the question of legitimate generalizability from flawed, a priori assumptions to being a target of explicit claims and theorizing. Moreover, the articulation framework allows us to integrate existing findings across research traditions and motivates a range of future directions. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
认知科学是对人类普遍性的研究。这一假设,我们将称之为牛顿原理(NP),或明或暗地充斥着大多数认知研究的理论、方法和散文。尽管至少半个世纪以来,跨文化和人类学方向的研究人员对这一假设进行了持续的批判,而且还出现了明显的反例,如识字研究。我们认为,这种顽固不化的一个关键原因是,"国家方案 "解决了认知科学的边界问题。既然研究个体的特异性认知特征不是一项可推广的科学事业,那么认知科学中哪种程度的推广才是合法和有趣的呢?NP 的解决方案是先验论,即只有归纳到全人类的研究结果才是合法的。这种方法显然是有缺陷的;然而,对 NP 的批评未能提供任何替代解决方案。事实上,一些反NP的研究分支已经完全放弃了概括性。我们在解释学和自然辩证法的 "斯库拉 "和 "卡律布迪斯 "之间航行,提出了一个明确的、替代性的解决方案来解决边界问题。也就是说,我们在以往许多努力的基础上,将文化进化理论与新定义的衔接原则相结合。这一框架要求在研究任何特定认知特征时,都要明确假设其产生的普遍环境或特定群体环境。这样做就把合法的可推广性问题从有缺陷的先验假设转移到了明确的主张和理论化目标上。此外,衔接框架使我们能够整合不同研究传统的现有研究成果,并为未来的研究方向提供了动力。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved)。
Beyond Newton: Why assumptions of universality are critical to cognitive science, and how to finally move past them.
Cognitive science is a study of human universals. This assumption, which we will refer to as the Newtonian principle (NP), explicitly or implicitly pervades the theory, methods, and prose of most cognitive research. This is despite at least half a century of sustained critique by cross-cultural and anthropologically oriented researchers and glaring counterexamples such as the study of literacy. We argue that a key reason for this intransigence is that the NP solves the boundary problem of cognitive science. Since studying the idiosyncratic cognitive features of an individual is not a generalizable scientific enterprise, what scale of generalization in cognitive science is legitimate and interesting? The NP solution is a priori-only findings generalizing to all humans are legitimate. This approach is clearly flawed; however, critiques of the NP fail to provide any alternative solution. In fact, some anti-NP branches of research have abandoned generalizability altogether. Sailing between the scylla and charybdis of NP and hermeneutics, we propose an explicit, alternative solution to the boundary problem. Namely, building on many previous efforts, we combine cultural-evolutionary theory with a newly defined principle of articulation. This framework requires work on any given cognitive feature to explicitly hypothesize the universal or group-specific environments in which it emerges. Doing so shifts the question of legitimate generalizability from flawed, a priori assumptions to being a target of explicit claims and theorizing. Moreover, the articulation framework allows us to integrate existing findings across research traditions and motivates a range of future directions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Psychological Review publishes articles that make important theoretical contributions to any area of scientific psychology, including systematic evaluation of alternative theories.