Overview
Cognitive science draws upon the tools and techniques of many different disciplines. It is a fundamentally interdisciplinary activity. As we saw in our tour of highlights from the history of cognitive science in Chapters 1 through 3, cognitive science draws on insights and methods from psychology, linguistics, computer science, neuroscience, mathematical logic . . . The list goes on. This basic fact raises some very important and fundamental questions. What do all these disciplines have in common? How can they all come together to form a distinctive area of inquiry? These are the questions that we will tackle in this chapter and the next.
The chapter begins in section 4.1 with a famous picture of how cognitive science is built up from six constituent disciplines. Whatever its merits as a picture of the state of the art of cognitive science in the 1970s, the Sloan hexagon is not very applicable to contemporary cognitive science. Our aim will be to work towards an alternative way of thinking about cognitive science as a unified field of investigation.
Review the options below to login to check your access.
Log in with your Cambridge Aspire website account to check access.
There are no purchase options available for this title.
If you believe you should have access to this content, please contact your institutional librarian or consult our FAQ page for further information about accessing our content.