Gallagher I
Department of Philosophy and Cognitive Science, Canisius College, Buffalo, NY 14208, USA.
Trends Cogn Sci. 2000 Jan;4(1):14-21. doi: 10.1016/s1364-6613(99)01417-5.
Several recently developed philosophical approaches to the self promise to enhance the exchange of ideas between the philosophy of the mind and the other cognitive sciences. This review examines two important concepts of self: the 'minimal self', a self devoid of temporal extension, and the 'narrative self', which involves personal identity and continuity across time. The notion of a minimal self is first clarified by drawing a distinction between the sense of self-agency and the sense of self-ownership for actions. This distinction is then explored within the neurological domain with specific reference to schizophrenia, in which the sense of self-agency may be disrupted. The convergence between the philosophical debate and empirical study is extended in a discussion of more primitive aspects of self and how these relate to neonatal experience and robotics. The second concept of self, the narrative self, is discussed in the light of Gazzaniga's left-hemisphere 'interpreter' and episodic memory. Extensions of the idea of a narrative self that are consistent with neurological models are then considered. The review illustrates how the philosophical approach can inform cognitive science and suggests that a two-way collaboration may lead to a more fully developed account of the self.
最近发展起来的几种关于自我的哲学方法有望促进心灵哲学与其他认知科学之间的思想交流。本综述考察了两个重要的自我概念:“最小自我”,即没有时间延展性的自我,以及“叙事自我”,它涉及个人身份和跨时间的连续性。最小自我的概念首先通过区分自我能动性意识和行动的自我所有权意识来阐明。然后在神经学领域内探讨这种区分,并特别提及精神分裂症,在这种疾病中自我能动性意识可能会受到干扰。在讨论自我的更原始方面以及这些方面如何与新生儿体验和机器人技术相关时,哲学辩论与实证研究之间的趋同得到了扩展。自我的第二个概念,叙事自我,根据加扎尼加的左半球“解释者”和情景记忆进行了讨论。然后考虑了与神经学模型一致的叙事自我概念的扩展。本综述说明了哲学方法如何为认知科学提供信息,并表明双向合作可能会带来对自我更全面的解释。