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Cultural intelligence, shared intentionality and human cognitive uniquenes

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dc.rights.license CC BY eng
dc.contributor.author Koreň, Ladislav cze
dc.date.accessioned 2025-12-05T14:40:51Z
dc.date.available 2025-12-05T14:40:51Z
dc.date.issued 2024 eng
dc.identifier.issn 0169-3867 eng
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12603/2186
dc.description.abstract This study critically reflects and assesses a recent debate over the nature of uniquely human cognition. The two standpoints in this debate are advocated by Michael Tomasello and Henrike Moll. Both agree that shared intentionality is a key differencemaker, affording qualitatively new mental processes that support new forms of cooperative sociality and cumulative culture and thoroughly transform human cognition. But Moll argues that Tomasello is infirm in his commitment to the transformativempact of shared intentionality on human cognition, flirting with a conflicting, additive account of shared intentionality as¨making a key difference only in the social domain. On her own view, human-unique social development innervated by humanunique forms of shared intentionality makes a difference across the board, and all the way down. This, we are told, is a reason not only to reject additive accounts, but to accept cognitive discontinuity across the board. Having reconstructed the two standpoints, I argue that Tomasello develops a consistently transformative approach immune to most objections leveled by Moll and in key respects more modest and plausible than her own alternative proposal. And I draw from this debate some general methodological lessons for theorizing about the nature and scope of human-unique cognition. eng
dc.format p. "Article number: 30" eng
dc.language.iso eng eng
dc.publisher Springer eng
dc.relation.ispartof Biology and Philosophy, volume 39, issue: 5 eng
dc.subject Human-unique cognition eng
dc.subject Shared intentionality eng
dc.subject Transformative vs. additive accounts of human cognition eng
dc.title Cultural intelligence, shared intentionality and human cognitive uniquenes eng
dc.type article eng
dc.identifier.obd 43881323 eng
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s10539-024-09966-w eng
dc.publicationstatus postprint eng
dc.peerreviewed yes eng
dc.source.url https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10539-024-09966-w cze
dc.relation.publisherversion https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10539-024-09966-w eng
dc.rights.access Open Access eng


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