Representations are (still) theoretical posits

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Published 02-06-2025
Zoe Drayson

Abstract

The debate over whether cognitive science is committed to the existence of neural representations is usually taken to hinge on the status of representations as theoretical posits: it depends on whether or not our best-supported scientific theories commit us to the existence of representations. Thomson and Piccinini (2018) and Nanay (2022) seek to reframe this debate to focus more on scientific experimentation than on scientific theorizing. They appeal to arguments from observation and manipulation to propose that experimental cognitive neuroscience gives us non-theoretical reasons to be ontologically committed to representations. In this paper, I challenge their claims about observation and manipulation, and I argue that the question of whether we are ontologically committed to representations is still best understood as a question about the level of support we have for our representation-positing scientific theories.

How to Cite

Drayson, Z. (2025). Representations are (still) theoretical posits. THEORIA. An International Journal for Theory, History and Foundations of Science. https://doi.org/10.1387/theoria.27209
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Keywords

representation, theory, scientific realism, empiricism, entity realism, cognitive neuroscience, inference

Section
REPRESENTATIONS IN COGNITIVE SCIENCE