Extending Cognitive Pragmatics: Social Mechanisms of Mind Transformation Cover Image

Extending Cognitive Pragmatics: Social Mechanisms of Mind Transformation
Extending Cognitive Pragmatics: Social Mechanisms of Mind Transformation

Author(s): Daniel Żuromski, Anita Pacholik-Żuromska, Adam Fedyniuk
Subject(s): Philosophy, Philosophical Traditions, Special Branches of Philosophy, Pragmatism, Philosophy of Mind
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Szczecińskiego
Keywords: cognitive pragmatics; cognitive semiotics; mechanism-based explanation; social mechanisms of mind transformation; shared intentionality; higher cognitive abilities; metacognition; dual system framewor

Summary/Abstract: In this article we propose an extended approach in terms of Cognitive Pragmatics (CP) to the explanation of the development of the higher cognitive processes. Therefore, we explain in terms of CP how linguistic and pre-linguistic social practices shape the mind. CP, as we understand it here, presents a broader transdisciplinary position covering developmental psychology, primatology, comparative psychology, cultural psychology, anthropology and philosophy. We present an argumentation for the thesis that CP provides an explanation to the origins and developmental mechanisms of some of the higher mental functions unique to humans. Thus, we want to extend the notion of CP beyond its standard definition by emphasizing the transformative component of communicative acts. In our approach, CP first and foremost examines the cognitive mechanisms underlying social pre-linguistic and linguistic communication. Secondly, it explores how this communication reorganizes and transforms cognitive abilities and processes. We would like to extend the tasks of CP as well, because its goal is not only to describe cognitive processes that enable communication, but also to explain the social mechanisms of the transformation of mind and cognition. We provide an example of the said mechanisms of the development of higher cognitive functions through the account of metacognition.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 58
  • Page Range: 65-91
  • Page Count: 27
  • Language: English