Avant (Dec 2016)

Cognition as Orientation in the Environment

  • Andrzej Lewicki,
  • Magdalena Kopczyńska

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26913/70302016.0109.0004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 46 – 67

Abstract

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There is one major reason that the conception of nervous reflection cannot be directly associated with “cognition” even though it undoubtedly should be a vital component of the definition of this term. Namely, reflection, understood as the creation of equivalents of external stimuli, is a process that happens not only in the brains of living creatures, but also in inanimate matter. A thermometer “reflects” changes in temperature, but we would not say that it “knows” them—it is the man who knows the temperature when using a thermometer. Reflection means cognition only when it determines offensive or defensive reactions of an organism: when it constitutes an element of the mechanism of adaptation to the environment, it enables the individual to be guided by the reflected external phenomena. […]

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