Reconceptualizing evolutionary psychology, by Barrett et al., Frontiers in Psychology, 12 August 2014. Therein it notes that the computational approach is akin to Chomsky’s
computational linguistics. Note that Lakoff broke from Chomsky on this
and went on to formulate embodied linguistics. It appears this debate is
an ongoing battle in different fields. (Which reminds me of this Stein blog post.) The abstract:
"Does evolutionary theorizing have a role in psychology? This is a more
contentious issue than one might imagine, given that, as evolved
creatures, the answer must surely be yes. The contested nature of
evolutionary psychology lies not in our status as evolved beings, but in
the extent to which evolutionary ideas add value to studies of human
behavior, and the rigor with which these ideas are tested. This, in
turn, is linked to the framework in which particular evolutionary ideas
are situated. While the framing of the current research topic places the
brain-as-computer metaphor in opposition to evolutionary psychology,
the most prominent school of thought in this field (born out of
cognitive psychology, and often known as the Santa Barbara school) is
entirely wedded to the computational theory of mind as an explanatory
framework. Its unique aspect is to argue that the mind consists of a
large number of functionally specialized (i.e., domain-specific)
computational mechanisms, or modules (the massive modularity
hypothesis). Far from offering an alternative to, or an improvement on,
the current perspective, we argue that evolutionary psychology is a
mainstream computational theory, and that its arguments for
domain-specificity often rest on shaky premises. We then go on to
suggest that the various forms of e-cognition (i.e., embodied, embedded,
enactive) represent a true alternative to standard computational
approaches, with an emphasis on “cognitive integration” or the “extended
mind hypothesis” in particular. We feel this offers the most promise
for human psychology because it incorporates the social and historical
processes that are crucial to human “mind-making” within an
evolutionarily informed framework. In addition to linking to other
research areas in psychology, this approach is more likely to form
productive links to other disciplines within the social sciences, not
least by encouraging a healthy pluralism in approach."
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