Positing a space mirror mechanism: intentional understanding without action?

Publication date

2020-06-08T10:56:34Z

2020-06-08T10:56:34Z

2013

2020-06-08T10:56:34Z

Abstract

Recent evidence regarding a novel functionality of the mirror neuron system (MNS), a so-called 'space mirror mechanism', seems to reinforce the central role of the MNS in social cognition. According to the space mirror hypothesis, neural mirroring accounts for understanding not just what an observed agent is doing, but also the range of potential actions that a suitably located object affords an observed agent in the absence of any motor behaviour. This paper aims to show that the advocate of this space mirror hypothesis faces a crippling dilemma. Either what observed agents can do remains underdetermined by space mirror representations, and no proper understanding of action potentiality is gained; or, if it is just understanding of potential motor acts that is achieved through the sensorimotor representations generated by shared object-related affordances, the very explanatory role of space mirroring is compromised.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Imprint Academic

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://www.ingentaconnect.com/contentone/imp/jcs/2013/00000020/f0020005/art00009

Journal of Consciousness Studies, 2013, vol. 20, num. 5-6, p. 171-193

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(c) Imprint Academic, 2013

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