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Ellen Spolsky
Professor of English, Bar-Ilan University, Israel
 
Second Speaker, Main Forum Session
 
Abstract
Cognitive Universals and Historical Change
The architecture of the mind/brain, specifically the gaps caused by its modularity, 
makes it interestingly unstable.  It is this very instability, however that 
builds in the possibility of creativity.  The job of the modular processes 
is to produce representations which are not entirely overlapping.  The derived 
interpretation, then is the outcome of a negotiation aimed at achieving a kind 
of satisfaction.  Because any representation will always be a compromise, 
it will always be unstable, teetering between obsolescence and novelty. (Witness 
the way one sees the Necker cube in two competing ways.) 
  
How, then, does the interpreting mind/brain react in the event of historical/ 
cultural change?  Evolutionary biologists, anthropologists, and psychologists 
focus their study on how the brain, like any other organism, adapts to a changed 
environment.  But our cultural theory and our literary texts demand that 
we investigate the reverse process as well.  Our special contribution is 
to study historical examples of the mind/brain as more than a passive reactor 
or adapter.  We need to develop more fully a cognitive description of the 
mind’s productivity - its interpretive creativity - and how it effects changes 
in the external culture. 
  
Ellen Spolsky 
Bar-Ilan University 
  
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