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    Neural and phenomenological evidence suggests representin... — Carmelics
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    Challenges→The act of spatial representing is itself non-spatial

    Neural and phenomenological evidence suggests representing space involves spatially organized brain processes that partly constitute the act itself.

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    1 reason for
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    Reasons For

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    Reason for
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    • 1.Brain imaging shows topographic maps in visual cortex that structurally mirror spatial layout, suggesting representation involves spatial organization.
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    • 2.Spatial reasoning is impaired by damage to specific brain regions, implying the spatial brain process is constitutive of the cognitive act, not merely correlated.
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    • 3.Embodied cognition research demonstrates spatial reasoning depends on motor and proprioceptive systems, showing representation is grounded in organized bodily processes.
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    Reasons Against

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    • 1.Topographic organization in cortex could be epiphenomenal—a neural correlate that enables but doesn't constitute the abstract representational act itself.
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    • 2.Abstract spatial concepts (non-Euclidean geometry, higher dimensions) are representable despite lacking corresponding spatially organized brain processes.
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    • 3.Constitutive claims require showing the spatial process is logically necessary, not merely causally necessary, which neural evidence alone cannot establish.
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    Consciousness & Mind1 linkedPerception1 linked

    Related

    Abstract spatial concepts (non-Euclidean geometry, higher dimensions) are repres...Brain imaging shows topographic maps in visual cortex that structurally mirror s...Constitutive claims require showing the spatial process is logically necessary, ...Embodied cognition research demonstrates spatial reasoning depends on motor and ...
    +3 moreShow less
    Spatial reasoning is impaired by damage to specific brain regions, implying the ...The act of spatial representing is itself non-spatialTopographic organization in cortex could be epiphenomenal—a neural correlate tha...

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    2 (1 for, 1 against)
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