E41: The offloaded brain, part 1: behavior

E41: The offloaded brain, part 1: behavior

Author: Brian Marick October 12, 2023 Duration: 31:52

Embodied or Ecological Cognition is an offshoot of cognitive science that rejects or minimizes one of its axioms: that the computer is a good analogy for the brain. That is, that the brain receives inputs from the senses; computes with that input as well as with goals,  plans, and stored representations of the world; issues instructions to the body; and GOTO PERCEPTION. The offshoot gives a larger causal role to the environment and the body, and a lesser role to the brain. Why store instructions in the brain if the arrangement of body-in-environment can be used to make it automatic?

This episode contains explanations of fairly unintelligent behavior. Using them, I fancifully extract five design rules that a designer-of-animals might have used. In the next episode, I'll apply those rules to workplace and process design. In the final episode, I'll address what the offshoot has to say about more intelligent behavior.

Sources

Mentioned or relevant

Credits

The picture of a diving gannet is from the Busy Brains at Sea blog, and is licensed CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 Deed.


Brian Marick hosts Oddly Influenced, a podcast that digs into the unusual and often overlooked connections between software development and the wider world. Each episode starts with a concept, theory, or practice that originated far from the realm of code-perhaps in sociology, theater, history, or urban planning-and traces its journey into the hands of software practitioners. The focus is on the concrete application: how these borrowed ideas were adapted, what problems they aimed to solve, and what actually happened when people tried them. You’ll hear about the successes, the surprising failures, and the messy, fascinating reality of translating an abstract principle into working practice. This isn’t about generic inspiration or vague parallels; it’s a detailed look at cross-disciplinary pollination, examining the mechanics of how influence actually works. The conversations are grounded and specific, avoiding hype to explore what we can genuinely learn from fields that don’t think in loops and logic. For anyone in technology or education curious about how innovation often comes from the edges, this podcast provides a unique and thoughtful perspective. It’s for listeners who enjoy deep dives into the history and sociology of their craft, who appreciate hearing stories that aren’t the usual case studies, and who are open to having their own thinking oddly influenced by the end of an episode.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 55

Oddly Influenced
Podcast Episodes
David Graeber’s three kinds of economies [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 25:30
David Graeber claims every society contains a mixture of variations on three types of economies: hierarchy, exchange, and "baseline communism". The context for software teams is a combination of hierarchy and commercial…
David Graeber, gift economies, and open source projects [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 23:11
An introduction to gift economies, based on the writings of anthropologist David Graeber. A critique of Eric Raymond's "Homesteading the Noosphere", which – I claim – misrepresents gift economies. Interesting tales of va…
Analogies in and around /Image and Logic/ [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 16:14
A comparison of how Monte Carlo analogies and software analogies played out. Plus: a suggestion that Galison's "trading zone" analogy in /Image and Logic/ has an important flaw.
Mini-episode: What does Galison mean by “tradition”? [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 14:12
Galison's definition of a scientific tradition is continuity over time of skills and technology, people, and standards of evidence. How does that apply to software? Some stories about the early days of both particle phys…
Galison’s /Image and Logic/, Part 2: The Trading Zone [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:35
Galison uses the metaphor of cultures meeting to trade to describe how, say, experimentalists and theorists collaborate. He describes procedures, machines, and diagrams as akin to pidgin trading languages.
E7: Imre Lakatos on what persuades scientists to risk their careers [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 21:08
Imre Lakatos intended to give rules for when scientists would be *rational* to switch to a new research program. At this, he probably failed, but I think he provides good heuristics for how to *persuade* scientist-like p…
Interview: James Shore and Boundary Objects [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 39:43
Episode one described the idea of “boundary objects.” In this episode, I interview James Shore as he describes how he’s used the idea in his own work as an old-school Agile consultant. Juicy descriptions of creating good…