Dear colleagues,
I’m happy to invite you to this lecture by Associate Professor Nancy Salay (Queen’s
University, Canada) on her new book How Words Help Us Think: An Externalist Account of
Representational Intentionality (Bloomsbury, 2025).
When: Friday 30 May 2025, 15:00-16:30
Where: Hörsaal 2I (NIG)
All welcome. Registration is not necessary, but let me know if you’d like to join us for
an apéritif at Café Eiles after the talk, so that I can book a table.
Abstract
There is general agreement that a capacity to act for reasons is a mark of intentionality.
Views differ widely, however, on how ‘acting for reasons’ unpacks.
According to the cognitivist tradition in which individuals are the central units of
investigation, intentional agents make sense of their world via internal representations
variously construed as neural, mental, or, on some reductive accounts, both. On these
views, to act for a reason is to be responsive to some representation of the how the world
is, was, or could be. How behaviour is guided by explicit use of representations—e.g.,
deliberation between whether to pick answer A or B on a multiple-choice exam—is taken to
be continuous with the way that implicitly representational processes such as perception
guide behavior.
For 4E theorists, in contrast, intentional agents are not individuals so much as they are
continually shifting agent-situation couplings to and from which responses develop, often
reciprocally. Intentional agents learn to cope within their world as they move and act
within it; their needs and wants develop in accordance with their capacity to skillfully
“operate” within ongoing situation landscapes. To ‘act for a reason’ here is to be
agentive and responsive in a codeveloping agent-situation.
In the context of a comprehensive account of cognition, both views offer important
insights. The representational approach brings attention to the cognitive power of
explicitly deliberative activity but 4E views explain how operative intentionality grounds
actions. In How Words Help Us Think, the book on which this talk is based, these insights
are merged. Representations do have a powerful role to play in deliberative processes but
not as internal structures that agents “recur” on; rather, they are external tools for
spatiotemporally extending the ongoing situations in which intentional agents are always
embedded.
On this view, a deliberative capacity, what I will be calling “representational
intentionality,” is a strongly scaffolded skill rather than a fundamental capacity: while
neural activity plays a critical role here, the development of representational
intentionality requires in addition a certain kind of environment—one in which there are
language practices—and a particular skill with it. My task in this book is to give an
account of how representational intentionality develops when the requisite endogenous and
exogenous factors are present. In this talk, I will present the arc of the view along with
some of the key arguments that support it.
--
Dr Joshua Bergamin
Co-PI
(Musical) Improvisation & Ethics
Department of Philosophy
University of Vienna
www.improv-ethics.net <http://www.improv-ethics.net/>