TY - GEN ID - cogprints4765 UR - http://cogprints.org/4765/ A1 - Harnad, Stevan Y1 - 2005/// N2 - Cognition is thinking; it feels like something to think, and only those who can feel can think. There are also things that thinkers can do. We know neither how thinkers can think nor how they are able do what they can do. We are waiting for cognitive science to discover how. Cognitive science does this by testing hypotheses about what processes can generate what doing (?know-how?) This is called the Turing Test. It cannot test whether a process can generate feeling, hence thinking -- only whether it can generate doing. The processes that generate thinking and know-how are ?distributed? within the heads of thinkers, but not across thinkers? heads. Hence there is no such thing as distributed cognition, only collaborative cognition. Email and the Web have spawned a new form of collaborative cognition that draws upon individual brains? real-time interactive potential in ways that were not possible in oral, written or print interactions. PB - John Benjamins KW - Cognition KW - computation KW - artificial intelligence KW - Turing Test KW - neural networks KW - collaboration KW - robotics KW - consciousness KW - feeling KW - thinking KW - Descartes KW - mind-reading KW - open access KW - interoperability TI - Distributed Processes, Distributed Cognizers and Collaborative Cognition SP - 501 AV - public EP - 514 ER -