Abstract
In the present paper I analyse the modularity thesis and, more specifically, the thesis
of domain-specificity of processing. I argue that this thesis is not trivial only under the assumption
of a variety of processes which differ from each other at the implementation level; otherwise,
the variety of cognitive processes can only be explained as emergent on the basic mechanism
of associative activation in that it operates on domain-specific representations, which is
something that no one would deny. But that assumption is untenable: there are no other processes
than associative activation (and inhibition) at the implementation level. Any claim to the
contrary is the result of a conceptual confusion between two senses of “associative”: a behavioural
one, relative to which there are cognitive processes that exceed the ability to code elementary
spatio-temporal contingencies, and one that lies instead at the implementation level.
Since the assumption of a plurality of processes at the implementation level is untenable, the
only viable interpretation of modularism (as far as domain-specificity is concerned) is a trivial
one. By this I do not mean that the thesis is devoid of any content. However, its content is
scarcely debatable, and far less thrilling than the debate has suggested so far.