rapaport@sunybcs.UUCP (02/19/87)
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT BUFFALO GRADUATE GROUP IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE MICHAEL J. TYE Department of Philosophy Northern Illinois University A PICTURE THEORY OF MENTAL IMAGES The picture theory of mental images has become a subject of hot debate in recent cognitive psychology. Some psychologists, notably Stephen Kosslyn, have argued that the best explanation of a variety of experi- ments on imagery is that mental images are pictorial. Although Kosslyn has valiantly tried to explain just what the basic thesis of the pic- torial approach (as he accepts it) amounts to, his position remains dif- ficult to grasp. As a result, I believe, it has been badly misunder- stood, both by prominent philosophers and by prominent cognitive scien- tists. My aims in this paper are to present a clear statement of the picture theory as it is understood by Kosslyn, to show that this theory presents no threat to the dominant digital-computer model of the mind (contrary to the claims of some well-known commentators), and to argue that the issue of imagistic indeterminacy is more problematic for the opposing linguistic or descriptional view of mental images than it is for the picture theory. Monday, March 9, 1987 3:30 P.M. Park 280, Amherst Campus Co-sponsored by: Department of Philosophy Informal discussion at 8:00 P.M. at a place to be announced. Call Bill Rapaport (Dept. of Computer Science, 636-3193 or 3181) or Gail Bruder (Dept. of Psychology, 636-3676) for further information. William J. Rapaport Assistant Professor Dept. of Computer Science, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14260 (716) 636-3193, 3180 uucp: ..!{allegra,decvax,watmath,rocksanne}!sunybcs!rapaport csnet: rapaport@buffalo.csnet bitnet: rapaport@sunybcs.bitnet