bookAug 1, 2006Closed access

Simulating Minds

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

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Abstract

Abstract How people assign mental states to others and how they represent or conceptualize such states in the first place are topics of interest to philosophy of mind, developmental psychology, and cognitive neuroscience. Three competing answers to the question of how people impute mental states to others have been offered: by rationalizing, by theorizing, or by simulating. Simulation theory says that mindreaders produce mental states in their own minds that resemble, or aim to resemble, those of their targets; these states are then imputed to, or projected onto, the targets. In low-level mindreading, such as reading emotions from faces, simulation is mediated by automatic mirror systems. More controlled…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Introspection
  • Psychology
  • Simulated reality
  • Theory of mind
  • Empathy
  • Attribution
  • Imitation
  • Mental representation
UN Sustainable Development Goals
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