An Ecological Approach to Conceptual Thinking in Material Engagement

Eur J Psychol. 2024 May 29;20(2):84-103. doi: 10.5964/ejop.13227. eCollection 2024 May.

Abstract

Although post-cognitivist approaches have shaken the status quo by emphasising the dynamic interactions among the brain, the body, and the environment in cognition, mainstream psychological theories continue to view concepts as primarily representational or skull-bound mental phenomena. As a result, the dynamics of action and the possible impact of material culture on conceptual thinking are poorly understood. In this paper, we explore the process and meaning of conceptual thinking from a material engagement perspective. We argue that conceptual thinking is not a matter of forming representations in the head but something we do-a way of engaging with materiality. Conceptual thinking is conceptual thinging, namely a kind of unmediated practical knowledge that individuals put into play when they engage, in a general way, with and through the world. In this sense, we propose that conceptual thinking is instantiated in the dynamic coordination of bodily practices and artefacts in sociomaterial activities. To elucidate this perspective, we introduce seven principles defining conceptual thinking within an ecological-enactive framework of cognition.

Keywords: conceptual thinking; ecological-enactive cognition; material culture; material engagement theory; things.

Grants and funding

Nicolás Alessandroni received financial support for this research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, and Sport (MECD, Spain) through the FPU16/05358 grant. His current research is funded by an FRQSC Postdoctoral Fellowship (B3Z, #333109). Lambros Malafouris’ work is supported by the European Research Council Consolidator Grant HANDMADE (No. 771997; European Union Horizon 2020 programme). Shaun Gallagher’s research is supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC) grant “Minds in Skilled Performance” (DP170102987).