Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Human Mental Abstraction Specificity Emergence Under Distributed Communicative Pressure. / Абиева, Наталия Александровна.
In: Научный результат. Серия: Вопросы теоретической и прикладной лингвистики, Vol. 3, No. 1, 1, 2017, p. 3-12.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Human Mental Abstraction Specificity Emergence Under Distributed Communicative Pressure
AU - Абиева, Наталия Александровна
N1 - Abieva N. A. Human Mental Abstraction Specificity Emergence Under Distributed Communicative Pressure // Научный результат. Серия: Вопросы теоретической и прикладной лингвистики. Т. 3. № 1. 2017. - С. 3-12
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Being mammals, humans both share with other animals varied forms of information exchange typical for that class and have something that makes them different, i.e. higher-order thinking, languages and unprecedented social activity resulting in a great diversity of cultures. People are particularly skilled in coordinating their activities, human communities rely on mind-sharing that isrealized through distributed cognition. It is argued in the paper that human species’ socially distributed cognition is an extension to their biologically distributed cognition both being inseparable from distributed communicative interactions. From the biosemiotic perspective, humans can be described asvery complex dynamic living systems that are continuously involved in multifaceted communicative activity but so are all living systems, and lower-level mental abstraction could have evolved in terms of spatial cognition employed in on-line communicative interaction with the environment. It is proposed that that initial level of mental abstraction could then advance into higher-order thinkingwhen humans developed communication off-line. Thus human semiotic mind specificity became possible due to biological and social distributed cognition and communication complementarity. The recorded history of mankind gives evidence that the focus on the off-line communication has been increasingly rising ever since. The shift from on-line to off-line interaction ensured the unparalleledsocial cooperation due to the distribution of cognitive processes across the members of a social group independently of 'here and now'.
AB - Being mammals, humans both share with other animals varied forms of information exchange typical for that class and have something that makes them different, i.e. higher-order thinking, languages and unprecedented social activity resulting in a great diversity of cultures. People are particularly skilled in coordinating their activities, human communities rely on mind-sharing that isrealized through distributed cognition. It is argued in the paper that human species’ socially distributed cognition is an extension to their biologically distributed cognition both being inseparable from distributed communicative interactions. From the biosemiotic perspective, humans can be described asvery complex dynamic living systems that are continuously involved in multifaceted communicative activity but so are all living systems, and lower-level mental abstraction could have evolved in terms of spatial cognition employed in on-line communicative interaction with the environment. It is proposed that that initial level of mental abstraction could then advance into higher-order thinkingwhen humans developed communication off-line. Thus human semiotic mind specificity became possible due to biological and social distributed cognition and communication complementarity. The recorded history of mankind gives evidence that the focus on the off-line communication has been increasingly rising ever since. The shift from on-line to off-line interaction ensured the unparalleledsocial cooperation due to the distribution of cognitive processes across the members of a social group independently of 'here and now'.
KW - evolution; mental abstraction; spatial cognition; lower-order and higher-order mental abstraction; on- and off-line communication; distributed cognition and communication; language origin
KW - evolution; mental abstraction; spatial cognition; lower-order and higher-order mental abstraction; on- and off-line communication; distributed cognition and communication; language origin
U2 - 10.18413/2313-8912-2017-3-1-3-12
DO - 10.18413/2313-8912-2017-3-1-3-12
M3 - Article
VL - 3
SP - 3
EP - 12
JO - Research Result. Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
JF - Research Result. Theoretical and Applied Linguistics
SN - 2313-8912
IS - 1
M1 - 1
ER -
ID: 13347423