Emotions and the Representational Mind: A Computationalist Perspective
Dissertation, The University of Western Ontario (Canada) (
1989)
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Abstract
What follows is a case study in the foundations of cognitive science. In it I explore the relation between the computational theory of mind and the theory of emotion. The argument of the thesis is that these two domains have much more to do with one another than has traditionally been supposed. The strategy adopted is to formulate a computational theory of emotion and then go on to extol its virtues. On the whole the aim of the project is to explore the possibility of interpreting information processing models of emotion computationally. The conclusion reached is that computational foundations for emotion theory are not only possible, but that in fact they provide a provocative perspective within which to reinterpret and focus a large amount of hitherto ossified and otherwise nomologically scattered results in emotion theory