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Folk Psychology as Mental Simulation

The simulation (or, "mental simulation") theory, introduced in 1986 by Robert Gordon and Jane Heal and further developed by Alvin Goldman, Paul Harris, and others, maintains that human beings are able to use the resources of their own minds to simulate the psychological etiology of the behavior of others, typically by making decisions within a "pretend" context. The theory is usually, though not always, taken to present a serious challenge to the assumption that a theory underlies everyday human competence in predicting and explaining behavior, including the capacity to ascribe mental states. Unlike earlier controversies concerning the role of empathetic understanding and historical reenactment in the human sciences, the current debate between the simulation theory and the "theory" theory appeals to empirical findings, particularly experimental results concerning children's development of psychological competence, as detailed below.

What is Meant by `Simulation'?

Like the term `theory,' `simulation' has come to be used broadly and in a variety of ways. Simulation is sometimes equated with role-taking, or "putting oneself in the other's place." However, it is often taken to include mere "projection," or reliance on a shared world of facts and emotive and motivational charges, without adjustments in imagination; e.g., where there is no need to put oneself in the other's place, as one is, in all relevant respects, already there. (Gordon calls this the default mode of simulation.) Sometimes it is taken to include as well automatic responses such as the subliminal mimicry of facial expressions and bodily movements. Stephen Stich and Shaun Nichols, whose critical papers have clarified the issues and helped refine the theory, urge that the term be dropped in favor of a finer-grained terminology.

Simulation is often conceived in cognitive-scientific terms: one's own behavior control system is employed as a manipulable model of other such systems. The system is first taken off-line, so that the output is not actual behavior but only predictions or anticipations of behavior, and inputs and system parameters are accordingly not limited to those that would regulate one's own behavior. Many proponents hold that, because one human behavior control system is being used to model others, general information about such systems is unnecessary. The simulation is thus said to be process-driven rather than theory-driven (Goldman).

Varieties of Simulation Theory

Important differences exist among simulation theorists on several topics. According to Goldman and (less clearly) Harris, to ascribe mental states to others by simulation, one must already be able to ascribe mental states to oneself, and thus must already possess the relevant mental state concepts. Gordon holds a contrary view suggested by both Kant and Quine: Only those who can simulate can understand an ascription of, e.g., belief--that to S it is the case that p. While no simulation theorist claims that all our everyday explanations and predictions of the actions of other people are based on role-taking, Heal in particular has been a moderating influence, arguing for a hybrid simulation-and-theory account that reserves simulation primarily for items with rationally linked content, such as beliefs, desires, and actions.

Areas of Empirical Investigation

Three main areas of empirical investigation have been thought especially relevant to the debate: The numerous other empirical questions of possible relevance to the debate include the following:
Does brain imaging reveal that systems and processes employed in decision-making are reemployed in the explanation and prediction of others' behavior?
Does narrative (including film narrative) create emotional and motivational effects by the same processes that create them in real-life situations?
Some philosophers think the simulation theory may shed light on issues in traditional philosophy of mind and language concerning intentionality, referential opacity, broad and narrow content, the nature of mental causation, Twin Earth problems, the problem of other minds, and the peculiarities of self-knowledge. Several philosophers have applied the theory to aesthetics, ethics, and philosophy of the social sciences. Success or failure of these efforts to answer philosophical problems may be considered empirical tests of the theory, in a suitably broad sense of "empirical."

Bibliography

The following collections include most of the relevant papers by authors mentioned in the article:
Further Readings:

Acknowledgment

The main body of this entry is excerpted, with permission, from "Simulation vs Theory Theory", MIT Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science (MIT Press, 1999)

Related Entries

materialism, eliminative | folk psychology, as a theory

Copyright © 1997 by
Robert M. Gordon
gordon@umsl.edu

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First published: December 8, 1997
Content last modified: January 9, 1998