Quotations about Experiential Constructivism
selected by James Lawley with recommended reading
Cognitive Science (p. 258-259)
Cybernetics
provided cognitive science with the first model of cognition. Its
premise was that human intelligence resembles computer 'intelligence'
to such an extent that cognition can be defined as information
processing, i.e. as the manipulation of symbols based on a set of
rules. According to this model, the process of cognition involves mental representation. The mind is thought to operate by manipulating symbols that represent certain features of the world.
Since
the 1940's, almost all of neurobiology has been shaped by this idea
that the brain is an information-processing device. The computer model
of cognition was finally subjected to serious questioning in the 1970's
when the concept of self-organization emerged. These observations
suggested a shift of focus — from symbols to connectivity,
from local rules to global coherence, from information processing to
emergent properties of neural networks.
Santiago Theory of Cognition (p. 260-262)
In
the emerging theory of living systems mind is not a thing, but a
process. It is cognition, the process of knowing, and it is identified
with the process of life itself. This is the essence of the Santiago
theory of cognition, proposed by Humberto Maturana and Francisco
Varela.
In
the Santiago theory the specific phenomenon underlying the process of
cognition is structural coupling. An autopoietic ['self-making' or
self-organising] system undergoes continual structural changes while
preserving its web-like pattern of organization. It couples to its
environment structurally,
i.e. through recurrent interactions, each of which triggers structural
changes in the system. The living system is autonomous, however. The
environment only triggers the structural changes; it does not specify
or direct them.
Now, the living system not only specifies these structural changes, it also specifies which perturbations from the environment trigger them.
This is the key to the Santiago theory of cognition. The structural
changes in the system constitute acts of cognition. By specifying which
perturbations from the environment trigger its changes, the system
'brings forth a world', as Maturana and Varela put it. Cognition, then,
is not a representation of an independently existing world, but rather
a continual bringing forth of a world
through the process of living. The interactions of a living systems
with its environment are cognitive interactions, and the process of
living itself is a process of cognition. In the words of Maturana and
Varela, 'to live is to know'.
It
is obvious that we are dealing here with a radical expansion with the
concept of cognition and implicitly, the concept of mind. In this new
view, cognition involves the entire process of life —
including perception, emotion, and behavior — and does not
necessarily require a brain and a nervous system. ... Thus even a
bacterium brings forth a world — a world of warmth and
coldness, of magnetic fields and chemical gradients. In all these
cognitive processes, perception and action are inseparable, and since
the structural changes and associated actions that are triggered in an
organism depend on the organism's structure, Francisco Varela describes
cognition as 'embodied action'.
In
fact, cognition involves two kinds of activities that are inextricably
linked: the maintenance and continuation of autopoiesis and the
bringing forth of a world. A living system is a multiply-interconnected
network whose components are constantly changing, being transformed and
replaced by other components. There is a great fluidity and flexibility
in this network, which allows the system to respond to disturbances, or
'stimuli', from the environment in a very special way. Certain
disturbances trigger specific structural changes, i.e. changes in the
connectivity throughout the network. This is a distributive phenomenon.
The entire network responds to a selected disturbance by rearranging
its patterns of connectivity.
Since
these structural changes are acts of cognition, development is always
associated with learning. In fact, development and learning are two
sides of the same coin. Both are expressions of structural coupling.
Not
all physical changes in an organism are acts of cognition. When part of
a dandelion is eaten by a rabbit, or when an animal is injured in an
accident, those structural changes are not specified and directed by
the organism; they are not changes of choice and are thus not acts of
cognition. However, these imposed physical changes are accompanied by
other structural changes (perception, response of the immune system,
etc.) that are acts of cognition.
On
the other hand, not all disturbances from the environment cause
structural changes. Living organisms respond to only a small fraction
of the stimuli impinging on them. Each living system builds up its own
distinctive world according to its own distinctive structure. As Varela
puts it, 'mind and world arise together'. However, through mutual
structural coupling, individual living systems are part of each other's
world. They communicate with one another and coordinate their behavior.
There is an ecology of worlds brought forth by mutually coherent acts
of cognition.
In the Santiago theory, cognition is an integral part of the way a living organism interacts with its environment. It does not react to environmental stimuli through a linear chain of cause and effect, but responds
with structural changes in its nonlinear, organizationally closed,
autopoietic network. This type of response enables the organism to
continue its autopoietic organization and thus to continue living in
its environment. In other words, the organism's cognitive interaction
with its environment is intelligent interaction. From the perspective
of the Santiago theory, intelligence is manifest in the richness and
flexibility of an organisms structural coupling.
The
range of interactions a living system can have with its environment
defines its 'cognitive domain'. As the complexity of a living organism
increases, so does its cognitive domain. At a certain level of
complexity, a living organism couples structurally not only to its
environment but also to itself, and thus brings forth not only an
external but also an inner world. In human beings the bringing forth of
such an inner world is intimately linked to language, thought, and
consciousness.
No representation, No information (p.263-265)
According
to the Santiago theory, cognition is not a representation of an
independent, pregiven world, but rather a bringing forth of a world.
What is brought forth by a particular organism in the process of living
is not the world but a
world, one that is always depending upon the organism's structure.
Since individual organisms within a species have more or less the same
structure, they bring forth similar worlds. We humans, moreover, share
an abstract world of language and thought through which we bring forth
our world together.
Maturana
and Varela do not maintain that there is a void out there, out of which
we create matter. There is a material world, but it does not have any
predetermined features. The authors of the Santiago theory do not
assert that 'nothing exists'; they assert that 'no things exist'
independent of the process of cognition. There are no objectively
existing structures; there is no pregiven territory of which we can
make a map — the map-making itself brings forth the features
of the territory.
Together
with the idea of mental representations of an independent world, the
Santiago theory also rejects the idea of information as some objective
feature of that independently existing world. To understand this
seemingly puzzling assertion, we must remember that for human beings
cognition involves language, abstract thinking and symbolic concepts
that are not available to other species.
The
ability to abstract is a key characteristic of human consciousness, and
because of that ability we can and do use mental representations,
symbols, and information. However, these are not characteristics of the
general process of cognition that is common to all living systems.
Although human beings frequently use mental representations and
information, our cognitive process is not based on them.
The
rejection of representation and of information as being relevant to the
process of knowing are both difficult to accept, because we use both
concepts constantly. To gain a proper perspective on these idea, it is
very instructive to take a closer look at what is meant by
'information'. The conventional view is that information is somehow
'lying out there' to be picked up by the brain. However, such a piece
of information is a quality, name, or short statement that we have
abstracted from the whole network of relationships, a context, in which
it is embedded and which gives it meaning. Whenever such a 'fact' is
embedded in a stable context that we encounter with great regularity,
we can abstract it from that context, associate it with the meaning
inherent in the context, and call it 'information'.
We
are so used to these abstractions that we tend to believe that meaning
resides in the piece of information rather than in the context from
which it has been abstracted. For example, there is nothing
'informative' in the color red, except that, when embedded in a
cultural network of conventions and in the technological network of
city traffic, it is associated with stopping at an intersection.
Development and Evolution (p. 215)
As
it keeps interacting with its environment, a living organism will
undergo a sequence of structural changes, and over time it will form
its own, individual pathway or structural coupling. At any point on
this pathway, the structure of the organism is a record of previous
structural changes and thus of previous interactions.
Now,
since an organism's structure at any point in its development is a
record of its previous structural changes, and since each structural
change influences the organisms future behavior, this implies that the
behavior of the living organism is determined by its structure. Thus a
living system is determined in different ways by its pattern of
organization and its structure. The pattern of organization determines
the system's identity (i.e. its essential characteristics); the
structure, formed by a sequence of structural changes, determines the
system's behavior.
Moreover,
the fact that the behavior is structure-determined does not mean that
it is predictable. The organism's structure merely conditions the
course of its interactions and restricts the structural changes that
interactions may trigger in it.
This
concept of structural determinism sheds new light on the age-old
philosophical debate about freedom and determinism. According to
Maturana, the behavior of a living organism is determined. However,
rather than being determined by outside forces, it is determined by the
organism's own structure — a structure formed by a succession
of autonomous structural changes. Thus the behavior of the living
organism is both determined and free.
The Structure of Magic II, John Grinder and Richard Bandler
(Science and Behavior Books, 1976)From The Epilogue p. 195-196
We wished to demonstrate, not that any particular approach to therapy is any more potent than any other approach, but that all forms of therapy assist their clients in changing. So the question is no longer which approach is the best; it is how such seemingly different approaches can work.Metaphors We Live By, George Lakoff and Mark Johnson
(The University of Chicago Press, 1980.)
From The Afterword (Second edition, 2003) p. 273Johnson, Mark, The Body in the Mind, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1987.
Lakoff, George, and Mark Johnson, Philosophy in The Flesh, Basic Books, New York, 1999.
McNamee Shelia & Gergen Kenneth, Therapy as Social Construction, Sage, 1992.
Maturana, Humberto and Francisco Varela, The Tree of Knowledge, Shambala, Boston, 1992.
Pearce, W. Barnett, Interpersonal Communication, Harper Collins, 1994
Varela, Francisco, Evan Thompson & Eleanor Rosch, The Embodied Mind, MIT Press, 1993.
Watzlawick, Paul, Munchhausen’s Pigtail, W.W.Norton & Co., New York, 1990.
Wilber, Ken, Sex, Ecology, Spirituality, Shambhala, Boston, MA, 1995.
James Lawley is a UKCP registered psychotherapist, coach in business, and certified NLP trainer, and professional modeller. He is a co-developer of Symbolic Modelling and co-author (with Penny Tompkins) of Metaphors in Mind: Transformation through Symbolic Modelling. James is lead trainer on the Northern School of NLP's two-year Psychotherapy Diploma which prepares people for accreditation with NLPtCA. For a longer biography see about us.
All information on this web site (unless otherwise stated) is Copyright © 1997- Penny Tompkins and James Lawley of The Developing Company. All rights reserved. You may reproduce and disseminate any of our copyrighted information for personal use only providing the original source is clearly identified. If you wish to use the material for any other reason please contact: