The Society of Mind
This course is an introduction to the theory that tries to explain how minds are made from collections of simpler processes. It treats such aspects of thinking as vision, language, learning, reasoning, memory, consciousness, ideals, emotions, and personality. It incorporates ideas from psychology, artificial intelligence, and computer science to resolve theoretical issues such as wholes vs. parts, structural vs. functional descriptions, declarative vs. procedural representations, symbolic vs. connectionist models, and logical vs. common-sense theories of learning.
Syllabus
- 1 Lecture 1: Introduction
- 2 Lecture 2: Falling In Love
- 3 Lecture 3: Cognitive Architectures
- 4 Lecture 4: Question and Answer Session 1
- 5 Lecture 5: From Panic to Suffering
- 6 Lecture 6: Layers of Mental Activities
- 7 Lecture 7: Layered Knowledge Representations
- 8 Lecture 8: Question and Answer Session 2
- 9 Lecture 9: Common Sense
- 10 Lecture 10: Question and Answer Session 3
- 11 Lecture 11: Mind vs. Brain: Confessions of a Defector
- 12 Lecture 12: Question and Answer Session 4
- 13 Lecture 13: Closing Thoughts
Course materials
- Course on MIT OpenCourseWare β website