Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems

Analysis of fit has focused on the macrolevel fit between social institutions and ecosystems, and bypassed the microlevel fit between individual cognition and its socio-material environment. I argue that the conceptualizations we develop about social-ecological systems and our position in them shoul...

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Main Author: Janne I. Hukkinen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2012-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art30/
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spelling doaj-4e014b13b8b14ac8984a048cc290440c2020-11-24T22:15:40ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872012-12-011743010.5751/ES-05241-1704305241Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological SystemsJanne I. Hukkinen0University of HelsinkiAnalysis of fit has focused on the macrolevel fit between social institutions and ecosystems, and bypassed the microlevel fit between individual cognition and its socio-material environment. I argue that the conceptualizations we develop about social-ecological systems and our position in them should be understood as ways for a fundamentally cognitive organism to adapt to particular social and ecological situations. Since at issue is our survival as a species, we need to better understand the structure and dynamics of fit between human cognition and its social-ecological environment. I suggest that the embodied cognition perspective opens up possibilities for "nudging" evolution through the conceptual integration of the cognitively attractive but ecologically unrealistic neoclassical economics, and the cognitively less attractive but ecologically more realistic adaptive cycle theory (panarchy). The result is a conceptually integrated model, the Roller Coaster Blend, which expresses in metaphorical terms why competitive individuals are better off cooperating than competing with each other in the face of absolute resource limits. The blend enables the reframing of messages about the limits of the social-ecological system in terms of growth rather than degrowth. This is cognitively appealing, as upward growth fires in our minds the neural connections of "more," "control", and "happy." The blend's potential for nudging behavior arises from its autopoietic characteristic: it can be both an account of the social-ecological system as an emergent structure that is capable of renewing itself, and a cognitive attractor of individuals whose recruitment reinforces the integrity of the social-ecological system.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art30/adaptive cycleadaptive managementblendingcognitive anthropologycognitive linguisticsconceptual integrationembodied cognitionenvironmental policyneoclassical economicspanarchysocial-ecological systemssocio-ecological systems
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Janne I. Hukkinen
spellingShingle Janne I. Hukkinen
Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems
Ecology and Society
adaptive cycle
adaptive management
blending
cognitive anthropology
cognitive linguistics
conceptual integration
embodied cognition
environmental policy
neoclassical economics
panarchy
social-ecological systems
socio-ecological systems
author_facet Janne I. Hukkinen
author_sort Janne I. Hukkinen
title Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems
title_short Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems
title_full Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems
title_fullStr Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems
title_full_unstemmed Fit in the Body: Matching Embodied Cognition with Social-Ecological Systems
title_sort fit in the body: matching embodied cognition with social-ecological systems
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2012-12-01
description Analysis of fit has focused on the macrolevel fit between social institutions and ecosystems, and bypassed the microlevel fit between individual cognition and its socio-material environment. I argue that the conceptualizations we develop about social-ecological systems and our position in them should be understood as ways for a fundamentally cognitive organism to adapt to particular social and ecological situations. Since at issue is our survival as a species, we need to better understand the structure and dynamics of fit between human cognition and its social-ecological environment. I suggest that the embodied cognition perspective opens up possibilities for "nudging" evolution through the conceptual integration of the cognitively attractive but ecologically unrealistic neoclassical economics, and the cognitively less attractive but ecologically more realistic adaptive cycle theory (panarchy). The result is a conceptually integrated model, the Roller Coaster Blend, which expresses in metaphorical terms why competitive individuals are better off cooperating than competing with each other in the face of absolute resource limits. The blend enables the reframing of messages about the limits of the social-ecological system in terms of growth rather than degrowth. This is cognitively appealing, as upward growth fires in our minds the neural connections of "more," "control", and "happy." The blend's potential for nudging behavior arises from its autopoietic characteristic: it can be both an account of the social-ecological system as an emergent structure that is capable of renewing itself, and a cognitive attractor of individuals whose recruitment reinforces the integrity of the social-ecological system.
topic adaptive cycle
adaptive management
blending
cognitive anthropology
cognitive linguistics
conceptual integration
embodied cognition
environmental policy
neoclassical economics
panarchy
social-ecological systems
socio-ecological systems
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol17/iss4/art30/
work_keys_str_mv AT janneihukkinen fitinthebodymatchingembodiedcognitionwithsocialecologicalsystems
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