Abstract

We have already delineated some basic aspects of the so-called eco-cognitive computationalism, for example the fact that computation is always seen in context, exploiting the ideas developed in those projects that have originated the recent views on embodied, situated, and distributed cognition. As illustrated in the previous chapter Turing’s original intellectual perspective has already clearly depicted the evolutionary emergence in humans of information, meaning, and of the first rudimentary forms of cognition, as the result of a complex interplay and simultaneous coevolution, in time, of the states of brain/mind, body, and external environment.

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