Page 2 - Foundations of Cognitive Psychology : Core Readings
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Preface

               Daniel J. Levitin







               What Is Cognition?
               Cognition encompasses the scientific study of the human mind and how it
               processes information; it focuses on one of the most difficult of all mysteries
               that humans have addressed. The mind is an enormously complex system
               holding a unique position in science: by necessity, we must use the mind to
               study itself, and so the focus of study and the instrument used for study are
               recursively linked. The sheer tenacity of human curiosity has in our own life-
               times brought answers to many of the most challenging scientific questions we
               have had the ambition to ask. Although many mysteries remain, at the dawn of
               the twenty-first century, we find that we do understand much about the fun-
               damental laws of chemistry, biology, and physics; the structure of space-time,
               theorigins of theuniverse. We have plausibletheoriesaboutthe originsand
               nature of life and have mapped the entire human genome. We can now turn
               our attention inward, to exploring the nature of thought, and how our mental
               life comestobewhatitis.
                 There are scientists from nearly every field engaged in this pursuit. Physicists
               try to understand how physical matter can give rise to that ineffable state we
               call consciousness, and the decidedly nonphysical ‘‘mind stuff’’ that Descartes
               and other philosophers have argued about for centuries. Chemists, biologists,
               and neuroscientists join them in trying to explicate the mechanisms by which
               neurons communicate with each other and eventually form our thoughts, mem-
               ories, emotions, and desires. At the other end of the spectrum, economists study
               how we balance choices about limited natural and financial resources, and
               anthropologists study the influence of culture on thought and the formation of
               societies. So at one end we find scientists studying atoms and cells, at the other
               end there are scientists studying entire groups of people. Cognitive psycholo-
               gists tend to study the individual, and mental systems within individual brains,
               although ideally we try to stay informed of what our colleagues are doing. So
               cognition is a truly interdisciplinary endeavor, and this collection of readings is
               intended to reflect that.


               Why Not a Textbook?
               This book grew out of a course I took at the Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
               nology (MIT) in 1975, from Susan Carey and Merrill Garrett (with occasional
               guest lectures by Mary Potter), and courses I taught at the University of Ore-
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