Quinean social skills: empirical evidence from eye-gaze against information encapsulation |
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Authors: | Mitch Parsell |
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Affiliation: | (1) Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW, 2109, Australia |
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Abstract: | Since social skills are highly significant to the evolutionary success of humans, we should expect these skills to be efficient
and reliable. For many Evolutionary Psychologists efficiency entails encapsulation: the only way to get an efficient system
is via information encapsulation. But encapsulation reduces reliability in opaque epistemic domains. And the social domain
is darkly opaque: people lie and cheat, and deliberately hide their intentions and deceptions. Modest modularity [Currie and
Sterelny (2000) Philos Q 50:145–160] attempts to combine efficiency and reliability. Reliability is obtained by placing social
skills in un-encapsulated central cognition; efficiency by having the social system sensitive to encapsulated socially tagged
cues. In this paper, I argue that this approach fails. I focus on eye-gaze as a plausible example of a socially significant
encapsulated cue. I demonstrate contra modest modularity that eye-gaze is subject to influence from central cognition.
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Keywords: | Evolutionary Psychology Eye-gaze Information encapsulation Modularity Social Contract Theory Social skills Sterelny |
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