Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition

<p>In this paper, I make a plea for viewing representation as first and foremost a political matter. I argue that by so doing we may avoid the many of pitfalls of contemporary theories of cognition as they attempt to tackle the issue of representation. Most of these problems have to do...

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Main Author: Kanavillil Rajagopalan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho 2001-02-01
Series:Alfa: Revista de Lingüística
Subjects:
Online Access:http://seer.fclar.unesp.br/alfa/article/view/4187
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spelling doaj-46c8feefed524e0e994e5f68045900fd2020-11-25T00:40:58ZengUniversidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita FilhoAlfa: Revista de Lingüística0002-52161981-57942001-02-01450Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognitionKanavillil Rajagopalan<p>In this paper, I make a plea for viewing representation as first and foremost a political matter. I argue that by so doing we may avoid the many of pitfalls of contemporary theories of cognition as they attempt to tackle the issue of representation. Most of these problems have to do with the fact that representation is treated exclusively as a mimetic or theatrical question. The fact of the matter is however that representation also has a political dimension. Indeed it has always had this political dimension which, counterintuitive though it may seem at first glimpse, manifests itself even in very the attempt to aestheticise the whole issue of representation (as in some versions of postmodernism) or to deny its role altogether as a tertium quid between the external world and the cognising mind (as in contemporary neo-pragmatism). I also contend that, by recognising the political nature of representation, we also pave the way for endorsing the thesis that the mind is a social construct, thereby taking some steam out of the thesis of "mind-brain identity" (so-called "identity theory of mind".</p>http://seer.fclar.unesp.br/alfa/article/view/4187Cognitionrepresentation: politicsrealismidealismideologyanti-representationalism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kanavillil Rajagopalan
spellingShingle Kanavillil Rajagopalan
Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
Alfa: Revista de Lingüística
Cognition
representation: politics
realism
idealism
ideology
anti-representationalism
author_facet Kanavillil Rajagopalan
author_sort Kanavillil Rajagopalan
title Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
title_short Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
title_full Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
title_fullStr Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
title_full_unstemmed Representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
title_sort representation of identities and the politics of representation in cognition
publisher Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho
series Alfa: Revista de Lingüística
issn 0002-5216
1981-5794
publishDate 2001-02-01
description <p>In this paper, I make a plea for viewing representation as first and foremost a political matter. I argue that by so doing we may avoid the many of pitfalls of contemporary theories of cognition as they attempt to tackle the issue of representation. Most of these problems have to do with the fact that representation is treated exclusively as a mimetic or theatrical question. The fact of the matter is however that representation also has a political dimension. Indeed it has always had this political dimension which, counterintuitive though it may seem at first glimpse, manifests itself even in very the attempt to aestheticise the whole issue of representation (as in some versions of postmodernism) or to deny its role altogether as a tertium quid between the external world and the cognising mind (as in contemporary neo-pragmatism). I also contend that, by recognising the political nature of representation, we also pave the way for endorsing the thesis that the mind is a social construct, thereby taking some steam out of the thesis of "mind-brain identity" (so-called "identity theory of mind".</p>
topic Cognition
representation: politics
realism
idealism
ideology
anti-representationalism
url http://seer.fclar.unesp.br/alfa/article/view/4187
work_keys_str_mv AT kanavillilrajagopalan representationofidentitiesandthepoliticsofrepresentationincognition
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