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Modularity of mind is the notion that a mind may, at least in part, be composed of innate neural structures or mental modules which have distinct, established, and evolutionarily developed functions. However, different definitions of "module" have been proposed by different authors. According to Jerry Fodor, the author of Modularity of Mind, a system can be considered 'modular' if its functions are made of multiple dimensions or units to some degree. One example of modularity in the mind is binding. When one perceives an object, they take in not only the features of an object, but the integrated features that can operate in sync or independently that create a whole. Instead of just seeing red, round, plastic, and moving, the subject may experience a rolling red ball. Binding may suggest that the mind is modular because it takes multiple cognitive processes to perceive one thing.
Early investigations
Historically, questions regarding the functional architecture of the mind have been divided into two different theories of the nature of the faculties. The first can be characterized as a horizontal view because it refers to mental processes as if they are interactions between faculties such as memory, imagination, judgement, and perception, which are not domain specific (e.g., a judgement remains a judgement whether it refers to a perceptual experience or to the conceptualization/comprehension process). The second can be characterized as a vertical view because it claims that the mental faculties are differentiated on the basis of domain specificity, are genetically determined, are associated with distinct neurological structures, and are computationally autonomous.
The vertical vision goes back to the 19th-century movement called phrenology and its founder Franz Joseph Gall. Gall claimed that the individual mental faculties could be associated precisely, in a one-to-one correspondence, with specific physical areas of the brain. For example, someone's level of intelligence could be literally "read off" from the size of a particular bump on his posterior parietal lobe. Phrenology's practice was debunked scientifically by Pierre Flourens in the 19th century. He destroyed parts of pigeons' and dogs' brains, called lesions, and studied the organisms' resulting dysfunction. He was able to conclude that while the brain localizes in some functions, it also works as a unit and is not as localized as earlier phrenologists thought. Before the early 20th century, Edward Bradford Titchener studied the modules of the mind through introspection. He tried to determine the original, raw perspective experiences of his subjects. For example, if he wanted his subjects to perceive an apple, they would need to talk about spatial characteristics of the apple and the different hues that they saw without mentioning the apple.
Fodor's Modularity of Mind
In the 1980s, however, Jerry Fodor revived the idea of the modularity of mind, although without the notion of precise physical localizability. Drawing from Noam Chomsky's idea of the language acquisition device and other work in linguistics as well as from the philosophy of mind and the implications of optical illusions, he became a major proponent of the idea with the 1983 publication of Modularity of Mind.
According to Fodor, a module falls somewhere between the behaviorist and cognitivist views of lower-level processes.
Behaviorists tried to replace the mind with reflexes, which are, according to Fodor, encapsulated (cognitively impenetrable or unaffected by other cognitive domains) and non-inferential (straight pathways with no information added). Low-level processes are unlike reflexes in that they can be inferential. This can be demonstrated by poverty of the stimulus argument, which posits that children do not only learn language from their environment, but are innately programmed with low-level processes that help them seek and learn language. The proximate stimulus, that which is initially received by the brain (such as the 2D image received by the retina), cannot account for the resulting output (for example, our 3D perception of the world), thus necessitating some form of computation.
In contrast, cognitivists saw lower-level processes as continuous with higher-level processes, being inferential and cognitively penetrable (influenced by other cognitive domains, such as beliefs). The latter has been shown to be untrue in some cases, such as the Müller-Lyer illusion, which can persist despite a person's awareness of their existence. This is taken to indicate that other domains, including one's beliefs, cannot influence such processes.
Fodor arrives at the conclusion that such processes are inferential like higher-order processes and encapsulated in the same sense as reflexes.
Although he argued for the modularity of "lower level" cognitive processes in Modularity of Mind he also argued that higher-level cognitive processes are not modular since they have dissimilar properties. The Mind Doesn't Work That Way, a reaction to Steven Pinker's How the Mind Works, is devoted to this subject.
Fodor (1983) states that modular systems must—at least to "some interesting extent"—fulfill certain properties:
- Domain specificity: modules only operate on certain kinds of inputs—they are specialised
- Obligatory firing: modules process in a mandatory manner
- Limited accessibility: what central processing can access from input system representations is limited
- Fast speed: probably due to the fact that they are encapsulated (thereby needing only to consult a restricted database) and mandatory (time need not be wasted in determining whether or not to process incoming input)
- Informational encapsulation: modules need not refer to other psychological systems in order to operate
- Shallow outputs: the output of modules is very simple
- Specific breakdown patterns
- Characteristic ontogeny: there is a regularity of development
- Fixed neural architecture.
Pylyshyn (1999) has argued that while these properties tend to occur with modules, one—information encapsulation—stands out as being the real signature of a module; that is the encapsulation of the processes inside the module from both cognitive influence and from cognitive access. One example is that conscious awareness that the Müller-Lyer illusion is an illusion does not correct visual processing.
Evolutionary psychology and massive modularity
The definition of module has caused confusion and dispute. In J.A. Fodor's views, modules can be found in peripheral and low-level visual processing, but not in central processing. Later, he narrowed the two essential features to domain-specificity and information encapsulation. According to Frankenhuis and Ploeger, domain-specificity means that "a given cognitive mechanism accepts, or is specialized to operate on, only a specific class of information". Information encapsulation means that information processing in the module cannot be affected by information in the rest of the brain. One example is that the effects of an optical illusion, created by low-level processes, persist despite high-level processing caused by conscious awareness of the illusion itself.
Other perspectives on modularity come from evolutionary psychology. Evolutionary psychologists propose that the mind is made up of genetically influenced and domain-specific mental algorithms or computational modules, designed to solve specific evolutionary problems of the past. Modules are also used for central processing. This theory is sometimes referred to as massive modularity.Leda Cosmides and John Tooby claimed that modules are units of mental processing that evolved in response to selection pressures. To them, each module was a complex computer that innately processed distinct parts of the world, like facial recognition, recognizing human emotions, and problem-solving. On this view, much modern human psychological activity is rooted in adaptations that occurred earlier in human evolution, when natural selection was forming the modern human species.
A 2010 review by evolutionary psychologists Confer et al. suggested that domain general theories, such as for "rationality", has several problems: 1. Evolutionary theories using the idea of numerous domain-specific adaptions have produced testable predictions that have been empirically confirmed; the theory of domain-general rational thought has produced no such predictions or confirmations. 2. The rapidity of responses such as jealousy due to infidelity indicates a domain-specific dedicated module rather than a general, deliberate, rational calculation of consequences. 3. Reactions may occur instinctively (consistent with innate knowledge) even if a person has not learned such knowledge. One example being that in the ancestral environment it is unlikely that males during development learn that infidelity (usually secret) may cause paternal uncertainty (from observing the phenotypes of children born many months later and making a statistical conclusion from the phenotype dissimilarity to the cuckolded fathers). With respect to general purpose problem solvers, Barkow, Cosmides, and Tooby (1992) have suggested in The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and The Generation of Culture that a purely general problem solving mechanism is impossible to build due to the frame problem. Clune et al. (2013) have argued that computer simulations of the evolution of neural nets suggest that modularity evolves because, compared to non-modular networks, connection costs are lower.
Several groups of critics, including psychologists working within evolutionary frameworks, argue that the massively modular theory of mind does little to explain adaptive psychological traits. Proponents of other models of the mind argue that the computational theory of mind is no better at explaining human behavior than a theory with mind entirely a product of the environment. Even within evolutionary psychology there is discussion about the degree of modularity, either as a few generalist modules or as many highly specific modules. Other critics suggest that there is little empirical support in favor of the domain-specific theory beyond performance on the Wason selection task, a task critics state is too limited in scope to test all relevant aspects of reasoning. Moreover, critics argue that Cosmides and Tooby's conclusions contain several inferential errors and that the authors use untested evolutionary assumptions to eliminate rival reasoning theories.
Criticisms of the notion of modular minds from genetics include that it would take too much genetic information to form innate modularity of mind, the limits to the possible amount of functional genetic information being imposed by the number of mutations per generation that led to the prediction that only a small part of the human genome can be functional in an information-carrying way if an impossibly high rate of lethal mutations is to be avoided, and that selection against lethal mutations would have stopped and reversed any increase in the amount of functional DNA long before it reached the amount that would be required for modularity of mind. It is argued that proponents of the theory of mind conflate this with the straw man argument of assuming no function in any non-protein-coding DNA when pointing at discoveries of some parts of non-coding DNA having regulatory functions, while the actual argument of limited amount of functional DNA does acknowledge that some parts of non-coding DNA can have functions but putting bounds on the total amount of information-bearing genetic material regardless of whether or not it codes for proteins, in agreement with the discoveries of regulatory functions of non-coding DNA extending only to parts of it and not be generalized to all DNA that does not code for proteins. The maximum amount of information-carrying heredity is argued to be too small to form modular brains.
Wallace (2010) observes that the evolutionary psychologists' definition of "mind" has been heavily influenced by cognitivism and/or information processing definitions of the mind. Critics point out that these assumptions underlying evolutionary psychologists' hypotheses are controversial and have been contested by some psychologists, philosophers, and neuroscientists. For example, Jaak Panksepp, an affective neuroscientist, point to the "remarkable degree of neocortical plasticity within the human brain, especially during development" and states that "the developmental interactions among ancient special-purpose circuits and more recent general-purpose brain mechanisms can generate many of the "modularized" human abilities that evolutionary psychology has entertained."
Philosopher David Buller agrees with the general argument that the human mind has evolved over time but disagrees with the specific claims evolutionary psychologists make. He has argued that the contention that the mind consists of thousands of modules, including sexually dimorphic jealousy and parental investment modules, are unsupported by the available empirical evidence. He has suggested that the "modules" result from the brain's developmental plasticity and that they are adaptive responses to local conditions, not past evolutionary environments. However, Buller has also stated that even if massive modularity is false this does not necessarily have broad implications for evolutionary psychology. Evolution may create innate motives even without innate knowledge.
In contrast to modular mental structure, some theories posit domain-general processing, in which mental activity is distributed across the brain and cannot be decomposed, even abstractly, into independent units. A staunch defender of this view is William Uttal, who argues in The New Phrenology (2003) that there are serious philosophical, theoretical, and methodological problems with the entire enterprise of trying to localise cognitive processes in the brain. Part of this argument is that a successful taxonomy of mental processes has yet to be developed.
Merlin Donald argues that over evolutionary time the mind has gained adaptive advantage from being a general problem solver. The mind, as described by Donald, includes module-like "central" mechanisms, in addition to more recently evolved "domain-general" mechanisms.
See also
- Automatic and Controlled Processes (ACP)
- Faculty psychology
- Jerry Fodor on mental architecture
- Language module
- Modularity
- Neuroconstructivism
- Neuroplasticity
- Peter Carruthers (philosopher)
- Society of Mind which proposes the mind is made up of agents
- Visual modularity
References
- Robbins, Philip (August 21, 2017). "Modularity of Mind". Standard Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
- Goldstein, E. Bruce (17 June 2014). Cognitive Psychology. p. 109. ISBN 978-1-285-76388-0.
- Fodor, Jerry A. (1983). Modularity of Mind: An Essay on Faculty Psychology. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-56025-9
- Hergenhahn, B. R., 1934–2007. (2009). An introduction to the history of psychology (6th ed.). Australia: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. ISBN 978-0-495-50621-8. OCLC 234363300.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - Laurence, Stephen (2001). "The Poverty of the Stimulus Argument". The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. 52 (2): 217–276. doi:10.1093/bjps/52.2.217.
- Donaldson, J (2017). "Muller Lyer". The Illusions Index.
- Pylyshyn, Z.W. (1999). "Is vision continuous with cognition? The case for cognitive impenetrability of visual perception" (PDF). Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 22 (3): 341–423. doi:10.1017/S0140525X99002022. PMID 11301517. S2CID 9482993. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-05-11.
- Frankenhuis, W. E.; Ploeger, A. (2007). "Evolutionary Psychology Versus Fodor: Arguments for and Against the Massive Modularity Hypothesis". Philosophical Psychology. 20 (6): 687. doi:10.1080/09515080701665904. S2CID 96445244.
- Cosmides, L. & Tooby, J. (1994). Origins of Domain Specificity: The Evolution of Functional Organization. In L.A. Hirschfeld and S.A. Gelmen, eds., Mapping the Mind: Domain Specificity in Cognition and Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Reprinted in R. Cummins and D.D. Cummins, eds., Minds, Brains, and Computers. Oxford: Blackwell, 2000, 523–543.
- Cosmides, L., & Tooby, J. (1992). Cognitive Adaptations for Social Exchange. In Barkow, Cosmides, and Tooby 1992, 163–228.
- Samuels, Richard (1998). "Evolutionary Psychology and the Massive Modularity Hypothesis". The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. 49 (4): 575–602. doi:10.1093/bjps/49.4.575. JSTOR 688132.
- Confer, J. C.; Easton, J. A.; Fleischman, D. S.; Goetz, C. D.; Lewis, D. M. G.; Perilloux, C.; Buss, D. M. (2010). "Evolutionary psychology: Controversies, questions, prospects, and limitations" (PDF). American Psychologist. 65 (2): 110–126. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.601.8691. doi:10.1037/a0018413. PMID 20141266.
- Clune, Jeff; Mouret, Jean-Baptiste; Lipson, Hod (2013). "The evolutionary origins of modularity". Proceedings of the Royal Society. 280 (1755): 20122863. arXiv:1207.2743. doi:10.1098/rspb.2012.2863. PMC 3574393. PMID 23363632.
- Panksepp, J. & Panksepp, J. (2000). The Seven Sins of Evolutionary Psychology. Evolution and Cognition, 6:2, 108–131.
- Buller, David J. and Valerie Gray Hardcastle (2005) Chapter 4. "Modularity", in Buller, David J. The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology. The MIT Press. pp. 127 – 201
- Davies, Paul Sheldon; Fetzer, James H.; Foster, Thomas R. (1995). "Logical reasoning and domain specificity". Biology and Philosophy. 10 (1): 1–37. doi:10.1007/BF00851985. S2CID 83429932.
- O'Brien, David; Manfrinati, Angela (2010). "The Mental Logic Theory of Conditional Propositions". In Oaksford, Mike; Chater, Nick (eds.). Cognition and Conditionals: Probability and Logic in Human Thinking. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 39–54. ISBN 978-0-19-923329-8.
- Lloyd, Elizabeth A. (1999). "Evolutionary Psychology: The Burdens of Proof" (PDF). Biology and Philosophy. 19 (2): 211–233. doi:10.1023/A:1006638501739. S2CID 1929648. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
- Peters, Brad M. (2013). http://modernpsychologist.ca/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/EP-Neglecting-Neurobiology-in-Defining-the-Mind1.pdf (PDF) Theory & Psychology https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/0959354313480269
- Wallace, B. (2010). Getting Darwin Wrong: Why Evolutionary Psychology Won't Work. Exeter, UK: Imprint Academic.
- Buller, David J. (2005). "Evolutionary psychology: the emperor's new paradigm" (PDF). Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 9 (6): 277–283. doi:10.1016/j.tics.2005.04.003. hdl:10843/13182. PMID 15925806. S2CID 6901180. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
- Buller, David J.; Hardcastle, Valerie (2000). "Evolutionary Psychology, Meet Developmental Neurobiology: Against Promiscuous Modularity" (PDF). Brain and Mind. 1 (3): 307–325. doi:10.1023/A:1011573226794. S2CID 5664009. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
- Buller, David J. (2005). "Get Over: Massive Modularity" (PDF). Biology & Philosophy. 20 (4): 881–891. doi:10.1007/s10539-004-1602-3. S2CID 34306536. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 17, 2015. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
- Uttal, William R. (2003). The New Phrenology: The Limits of Localizing Cognitive Processes in the Brain. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
- Donald, A Mind So Rare: The Evolution of Human Consciousness .
Further reading
- Barrett, H.C.; Kurzban, R. (2006). "Modularity in cognition: Framing the debate" (PDF). Psychological Review. 113 (3): 628–647. doi:10.1037/0033-295X.113.3.628. PMID 16802884.
- Pylyshyn, Z.W. (1984). Computation and cognition: Toward a foundation for cognitive science. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press (Also available through CogNet).
- Animal Minds: Beyond Cognition to Consciousness Donald R. Griffin, University of Chicago Press, 2001 (ISBN 0226308650)
- Shallice, Tim, & Cooper, Rick. (2011). The Organisation of Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Chapter 3: Bridging the Theoretical Gap: from the Brain to Cognitive Theory (pp. 67–107).
Online videos
- RSA talk by evolutionary psychologist Robert Kurzban on modularity of mind, based on his book, Why Everyone (Else) is a Hypocrite
- Stone Age Minds: A conversation with evolutionary psychologists Leda Cosmides and John Tooby
- Video of a computer simulation of the evolution of modularity in neural nets.
Modularity of mind is the notion that a mind may at least in part be composed of innate neural structures or mental modules which have distinct established and evolutionarily developed functions However different definitions of module have been proposed by different authors According to Jerry Fodor the author of Modularity of Mind a system can be considered modular if its functions are made of multiple dimensions or units to some degree One example of modularity in the mind is binding When one perceives an object they take in not only the features of an object but the integrated features that can operate in sync or independently that create a whole Instead of just seeing red round plastic and moving the subject may experience a rolling red ball Binding may suggest that the mind is modular because it takes multiple cognitive processes to perceive one thing Early investigationsHistorically questions regarding the functional architecture of the mind have been divided into two different theories of the nature of the faculties The first can be characterized as a horizontal view because it refers to mental processes as if they are interactions between faculties such as memory imagination judgement and perception which are not domain specific e g a judgement remains a judgement whether it refers to a perceptual experience or to the conceptualization comprehension process The second can be characterized as a vertical view because it claims that the mental faculties are differentiated on the basis of domain specificity are genetically determined are associated with distinct neurological structures and are computationally autonomous The vertical vision goes back to the 19th century movement called phrenology and its founder Franz Joseph Gall Gall claimed that the individual mental faculties could be associated precisely in a one to one correspondence with specific physical areas of the brain For example someone s level of intelligence could be literally read off from the size of a particular bump on his posterior parietal lobe Phrenology s practice was debunked scientifically by Pierre Flourens in the 19th century He destroyed parts of pigeons and dogs brains called lesions and studied the organisms resulting dysfunction He was able to conclude that while the brain localizes in some functions it also works as a unit and is not as localized as earlier phrenologists thought Before the early 20th century Edward Bradford Titchener studied the modules of the mind through introspection He tried to determine the original raw perspective experiences of his subjects For example if he wanted his subjects to perceive an apple they would need to talk about spatial characteristics of the apple and the different hues that they saw without mentioning the apple Fodor s Modularity of MindIn the 1980s however Jerry Fodor revived the idea of the modularity of mind although without the notion of precise physical localizability Drawing from Noam Chomsky s idea of the language acquisition device and other work in linguistics as well as from the philosophy of mind and the implications of optical illusions he became a major proponent of the idea with the 1983 publication of Modularity of Mind According to Fodor a module falls somewhere between the behaviorist and cognitivist views of lower level processes Behaviorists tried to replace the mind with reflexes which are according to Fodor encapsulated cognitively impenetrable or unaffected by other cognitive domains and non inferential straight pathways with no information added Low level processes are unlike reflexes in that they can be inferential This can be demonstrated by poverty of the stimulus argument which posits that children do not only learn language from their environment but are innately programmed with low level processes that help them seek and learn language The proximate stimulus that which is initially received by the brain such as the 2D image received by the retina cannot account for the resulting output for example our 3D perception of the world thus necessitating some form of computation In contrast cognitivists saw lower level processes as continuous with higher level processes being inferential and cognitively penetrable influenced by other cognitive domains such as beliefs The latter has been shown to be untrue in some cases such as the Muller Lyer illusion which can persist despite a person s awareness of their existence This is taken to indicate that other domains including one s beliefs cannot influence such processes Fodor arrives at the conclusion that such processes are inferential like higher order processes and encapsulated in the same sense as reflexes Although he argued for the modularity of lower level cognitive processes in Modularity of Mind he also argued that higher level cognitive processes are not modular since they have dissimilar properties The Mind Doesn t Work That Way a reaction to Steven Pinker s How the Mind Works is devoted to this subject Fodor 1983 states that modular systems must at least to some interesting extent fulfill certain properties Domain specificity modules only operate on certain kinds of inputs they are specialised Obligatory firing modules process in a mandatory manner Limited accessibility what central processing can access from input system representations is limited Fast speed probably due to the fact that they are encapsulated thereby needing only to consult a restricted database and mandatory time need not be wasted in determining whether or not to process incoming input Informational encapsulation modules need not refer to other psychological systems in order to operate Shallow outputs the output of modules is very simple Specific breakdown patterns Characteristic ontogeny there is a regularity of development Fixed neural architecture Pylyshyn 1999 has argued that while these properties tend to occur with modules one information encapsulation stands out as being the real signature of a module that is the encapsulation of the processes inside the module from both cognitive influence and from cognitive access One example is that conscious awareness that the Muller Lyer illusion is an illusion does not correct visual processing Evolutionary psychology and massive modularityThe definition of module has caused confusion and dispute In J A Fodor s views modules can be found in peripheral and low level visual processing but not in central processing Later he narrowed the two essential features to domain specificity and information encapsulation According to Frankenhuis and Ploeger domain specificity means that a given cognitive mechanism accepts or is specialized to operate on only a specific class of information Information encapsulation means that information processing in the module cannot be affected by information in the rest of the brain One example is that the effects of an optical illusion created by low level processes persist despite high level processing caused by conscious awareness of the illusion itself Other perspectives on modularity come from evolutionary psychology Evolutionary psychologists propose that the mind is made up of genetically influenced and domain specific mental algorithms or computational modules designed to solve specific evolutionary problems of the past Modules are also used for central processing This theory is sometimes referred to as massive modularity Leda Cosmides and John Tooby claimed that modules are units of mental processing that evolved in response to selection pressures To them each module was a complex computer that innately processed distinct parts of the world like facial recognition recognizing human emotions and problem solving On this view much modern human psychological activity is rooted in adaptations that occurred earlier in human evolution when natural selection was forming the modern human species A 2010 review by evolutionary psychologists Confer et al suggested that domain general theories such as for rationality has several problems 1 Evolutionary theories using the idea of numerous domain specific adaptions have produced testable predictions that have been empirically confirmed the theory of domain general rational thought has produced no such predictions or confirmations 2 The rapidity of responses such as jealousy due to infidelity indicates a domain specific dedicated module rather than a general deliberate rational calculation of consequences 3 Reactions may occur instinctively consistent with innate knowledge even if a person has not learned such knowledge One example being that in the ancestral environment it is unlikely that males during development learn that infidelity usually secret may cause paternal uncertainty from observing the phenotypes of children born many months later and making a statistical conclusion from the phenotype dissimilarity to the cuckolded fathers With respect to general purpose problem solvers Barkow Cosmides and Tooby 1992 have suggested in The Adapted Mind Evolutionary Psychology and The Generation of Culture that a purely general problem solving mechanism is impossible to build due to the frame problem Clune et al 2013 have argued that computer simulations of the evolution of neural nets suggest that modularity evolves because compared to non modular networks connection costs are lower Several groups of critics including psychologists working within evolutionary frameworks argue that the massively modular theory of mind does little to explain adaptive psychological traits Proponents of other models of the mind argue that the computational theory of mind is no better at explaining human behavior than a theory with mind entirely a product of the environment Even within evolutionary psychology there is discussion about the degree of modularity either as a few generalist modules or as many highly specific modules Other critics suggest that there is little empirical support in favor of the domain specific theory beyond performance on the Wason selection task a task critics state is too limited in scope to test all relevant aspects of reasoning Moreover critics argue that Cosmides and Tooby s conclusions contain several inferential errors and that the authors use untested evolutionary assumptions to eliminate rival reasoning theories Criticisms of the notion of modular minds from genetics include that it would take too much genetic information to form innate modularity of mind the limits to the possible amount of functional genetic information being imposed by the number of mutations per generation that led to the prediction that only a small part of the human genome can be functional in an information carrying way if an impossibly high rate of lethal mutations is to be avoided and that selection against lethal mutations would have stopped and reversed any increase in the amount of functional DNA long before it reached the amount that would be required for modularity of mind It is argued that proponents of the theory of mind conflate this with the straw man argument of assuming no function in any non protein coding DNA when pointing at discoveries of some parts of non coding DNA having regulatory functions while the actual argument of limited amount of functional DNA does acknowledge that some parts of non coding DNA can have functions but putting bounds on the total amount of information bearing genetic material regardless of whether or not it codes for proteins in agreement with the discoveries of regulatory functions of non coding DNA extending only to parts of it and not be generalized to all DNA that does not code for proteins The maximum amount of information carrying heredity is argued to be too small to form modular brains Wallace 2010 observes that the evolutionary psychologists definition of mind has been heavily influenced by cognitivism and or information processing definitions of the mind Critics point out that these assumptions underlying evolutionary psychologists hypotheses are controversial and have been contested by some psychologists philosophers and neuroscientists For example Jaak Panksepp an affective neuroscientist point to the remarkable degree of neocortical plasticity within the human brain especially during development and states that the developmental interactions among ancient special purpose circuits and more recent general purpose brain mechanisms can generate many of the modularized human abilities that evolutionary psychology has entertained Philosopher David Buller agrees with the general argument that the human mind has evolved over time but disagrees with the specific claims evolutionary psychologists make He has argued that the contention that the mind consists of thousands of modules including sexually dimorphic jealousy and parental investment modules are unsupported by the available empirical evidence He has suggested that the modules result from the brain s developmental plasticity and that they are adaptive responses to local conditions not past evolutionary environments However Buller has also stated that even if massive modularity is false this does not necessarily have broad implications for evolutionary psychology Evolution may create innate motives even without innate knowledge In contrast to modular mental structure some theories posit domain general processing in which mental activity is distributed across the brain and cannot be decomposed even abstractly into independent units A staunch defender of this view is William Uttal who argues in The New Phrenology 2003 that there are serious philosophical theoretical and methodological problems with the entire enterprise of trying to localise cognitive processes in the brain Part of this argument is that a successful taxonomy of mental processes has yet to be developed Merlin Donald argues that over evolutionary time the mind has gained adaptive advantage from being a general problem solver The mind as described by Donald includes module like central mechanisms in addition to more recently evolved domain general mechanisms See alsoAutomatic and Controlled Processes ACP Faculty psychology Jerry Fodor on mental architecture Language module Modularity Neuroconstructivism Neuroplasticity Peter Carruthers philosopher Society of Mind which proposes the mind is made up of agents Visual modularityReferencesRobbins Philip August 21 2017 Modularity of Mind Standard Encyclopedia of Philosophy Goldstein E Bruce 17 June 2014 Cognitive Psychology p 109 ISBN 978 1 285 76388 0 Fodor Jerry A 1983 Modularity of Mind An Essay on Faculty Psychology Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 0 262 56025 9 Hergenhahn B R 1934 2007 2009 An introduction to the history of psychology 6th ed Australia Wadsworth Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0 495 50621 8 OCLC 234363300 a href wiki Template Cite book title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Laurence Stephen 2001 The Poverty of the Stimulus Argument The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 52 2 217 276 doi 10 1093 bjps 52 2 217 Donaldson J 2017 Muller Lyer The Illusions Index Pylyshyn Z W 1999 Is vision continuous with cognition The case for cognitive impenetrability of visual perception PDF Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 3 341 423 doi 10 1017 S0140525X99002022 PMID 11301517 S2CID 9482993 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 05 11 Frankenhuis W E Ploeger A 2007 Evolutionary Psychology Versus Fodor Arguments for and Against the Massive Modularity Hypothesis Philosophical Psychology 20 6 687 doi 10 1080 09515080701665904 S2CID 96445244 Cosmides L amp Tooby J 1994 Origins of Domain Specificity The Evolution of Functional Organization In L A Hirschfeld and S A Gelmen eds Mapping the Mind Domain Specificity in Cognition and Culture Cambridge Cambridge University Press Reprinted in R Cummins and D D Cummins eds Minds Brains and Computers Oxford Blackwell 2000 523 543 Cosmides L amp Tooby J 1992 Cognitive Adaptations for Social Exchange In Barkow Cosmides and Tooby 1992 163 228 Samuels Richard 1998 Evolutionary Psychology and the Massive Modularity Hypothesis The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 49 4 575 602 doi 10 1093 bjps 49 4 575 JSTOR 688132 Confer J C Easton J A Fleischman D S Goetz C D Lewis D M G Perilloux C Buss D M 2010 Evolutionary psychology Controversies questions prospects and limitations PDF American Psychologist 65 2 110 126 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 601 8691 doi 10 1037 a0018413 PMID 20141266 Clune Jeff Mouret Jean Baptiste Lipson Hod 2013 The evolutionary origins of modularity Proceedings of the Royal Society 280 1755 20122863 arXiv 1207 2743 doi 10 1098 rspb 2012 2863 PMC 3574393 PMID 23363632 Panksepp J amp Panksepp J 2000 The Seven Sins of Evolutionary Psychology Evolution and Cognition 6 2 108 131 Buller David J and Valerie Gray Hardcastle 2005 Chapter 4 Modularity in Buller David J The Adapted Mind Evolutionary Psychology The MIT Press pp 127 201 Davies Paul Sheldon Fetzer James H Foster Thomas R 1995 Logical reasoning and domain specificity Biology and Philosophy 10 1 1 37 doi 10 1007 BF00851985 S2CID 83429932 O Brien David Manfrinati Angela 2010 The Mental Logic Theory of Conditional Propositions In Oaksford Mike Chater Nick eds Cognition and Conditionals Probability and Logic in Human Thinking New York Oxford University Press pp 39 54 ISBN 978 0 19 923329 8 Lloyd Elizabeth A 1999 Evolutionary Psychology The Burdens of Proof PDF Biology and Philosophy 19 2 211 233 doi 10 1023 A 1006638501739 S2CID 1929648 Retrieved October 6 2014 Peters Brad M 2013 http modernpsychologist ca wp content uploads 2011 12 EP Neglecting Neurobiology in Defining the Mind1 pdf PDF Theory amp Psychology https journals sagepub com doi 10 1177 0959354313480269 Wallace B 2010 Getting Darwin Wrong Why Evolutionary Psychology Won t Work Exeter UK Imprint Academic Buller David J 2005 Evolutionary psychology the emperor s new paradigm PDF Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9 6 277 283 doi 10 1016 j tics 2005 04 003 hdl 10843 13182 PMID 15925806 S2CID 6901180 Retrieved March 23 2013 Buller David J Hardcastle Valerie 2000 Evolutionary Psychology Meet Developmental Neurobiology Against Promiscuous Modularity PDF Brain and Mind 1 3 307 325 doi 10 1023 A 1011573226794 S2CID 5664009 Retrieved March 23 2013 Buller David J 2005 Get Over Massive Modularity PDF Biology amp Philosophy 20 4 881 891 doi 10 1007 s10539 004 1602 3 S2CID 34306536 Archived from the original PDF on March 17 2015 Retrieved March 23 2013 Uttal William R 2003 The New Phrenology The Limits of Localizing Cognitive Processes in the Brain Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press Donald A Mind So Rare The Evolution of Human Consciousness Further readingBarrett H C Kurzban R 2006 Modularity in cognition Framing the debate PDF Psychological Review 113 3 628 647 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 113 3 628 PMID 16802884 Pylyshyn Z W 1984 Computation and cognition Toward a foundation for cognitive science Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press Also available through CogNet Animal Minds Beyond Cognition to Consciousness Donald R Griffin University of Chicago Press 2001 ISBN 0226308650 Shallice Tim amp Cooper Rick 2011 The Organisation of Mind Oxford Oxford University Press Chapter 3 Bridging the Theoretical Gap from the Brain to Cognitive Theory pp 67 107 Online videosRSA talk by evolutionary psychologist Robert Kurzban on modularity of mind based on his book Why Everyone Else is a Hypocrite Stone Age Minds A conversation with evolutionary psychologists Leda Cosmides and John Tooby Video of a computer simulation of the evolution of modularity in neural nets