Abstraction through the lens of neuroscience

Authors

  • Valentin A. Bazhanov Ulyanovsk State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5840/eps202158222

Keywords:

cognitive research, naturalism, neuroscience, abstraction, ontology, epistemological focus

Abstract

The interpretation of the abstraction process and the use of various abstractions are consistent with the trends associated with the naturalistic turn in modern cognitive and neural studies. Logic of dealing with abstractions presupposes not only acts of digress from the insignificant details of the object, but also the replenishment of the image due to idealization, endowing the object with properties that are absent from it. Thus, abstraction expresses not only the activity of the subject but the fact of "locking" this activity on a certain kind of ontology as well. The latter, in the spirit of I. Kant's apriorism, is a function of epistemological attitudes and the nature of the subject's activity. Therefore, in the context of modern neuroscience, we can mean the transcendentalism of activity type. An effective tool for comprehension of abstractions making and development is a metaphor, which, on the one hand, allows submerge the object of analysis into a more or less familiar context, and on the other hand, it may produce new abstractions. Naturalistic tendencies manifested in the fact that empirically established abstractions activate certain neural brain networks, and abstract and concrete concepts are "processed" by various parts of the brain. If we keep in mind the presence of different levels abstractions then not only neural networks but even individual neurons (called "conceptual") can be excited. The excitation of neural networks is associated with understanding the meaning of some concepts, but at the same time, the activity of these networks presupposes the "dissection" of reality due to a certain angle, determined in the general case by goals, attitudes and concrete practices of the subject.

Published

2021-06-19

How to Cite

[1]
2021. Abstraction through the lens of neuroscience. Epistemology & Philosophy of Science. 58, 2 (Jun. 2021), 6–18. DOI:https://doi.org/10.5840/eps202158222.