Imagination in the Generation of Pictures and Interpersonal Scenarios
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Keith Oatley
Abstract
In Imagination, Jim Davies explains that most humans have mental imagery: an ability to make pictures in the mind without immediate perceptual input-as we do when we dream. Davies writes programs that enable computers to do something similar. Given a few words of description, a computer can generate pictures with several objects arranged in appropriate ways. Jonathan Gilmore’s Apt Imaginings is about whether engagement in works of fiction is continuous or discontinuous with how we deal with people and objects in everyday life. He argues for discontinuity. In constructing a critical framework within which to evaluate these two books, I use Kenneth Craik’s theory of mental models. Craik’s theory enables us to understand how we humans have evolved to imagine possible futures, to plan and to act in relation to them, and also to imagine what might be going on in other people’s minds.
© 2018 Academic Studies Press
Articles in the same Issue
- Title
- Table of Contents
- ARTICLES
- An Infectious Curiosity: Morbid Curiosity and Media Preferences during a Pandemic
- Deny None of It: A Biocultural Reading of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale
- An Evolutionary Cognitive Approach to Comparative Fascist Studies: Hypermasculinization, Supernormal Stimuli, and Conspirational Beliefs
- Untangling Darwinian Confusion around Lust, Love, and Attachment in the Scandinavian Modern Breakthrough
- REVIEW ESSAYS
- Learning from Fiction?
- Imagination in the Generation of Pictures and Interpersonal Scenarios
- BOOK REVIEWS
- Iris Berent
- Frans B. M. de Waal
- Charles Forceville
- David Haig
- Clare Hanson
- Joseph Henrich
- Joseph LeDoux
- Alan C. Love and William Wimsatt, eds.
- Brian Rennie
- ARTICLE REVIEWS
- Audiovisual Media
- Cognitive Poetics
- Cultural Theory
- Imagination
- Language
- Law
- Life Narratives
- Literature
- Music
- Paleoaesthetics
- Politics and Ideology
- Popular Culture
- Religion
- LETTERS
- Ruth Leys
- Reply by Rainer Reisenzein
- Contributors
Articles in the same Issue
- Title
- Table of Contents
- ARTICLES
- An Infectious Curiosity: Morbid Curiosity and Media Preferences during a Pandemic
- Deny None of It: A Biocultural Reading of Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale
- An Evolutionary Cognitive Approach to Comparative Fascist Studies: Hypermasculinization, Supernormal Stimuli, and Conspirational Beliefs
- Untangling Darwinian Confusion around Lust, Love, and Attachment in the Scandinavian Modern Breakthrough
- REVIEW ESSAYS
- Learning from Fiction?
- Imagination in the Generation of Pictures and Interpersonal Scenarios
- BOOK REVIEWS
- Iris Berent
- Frans B. M. de Waal
- Charles Forceville
- David Haig
- Clare Hanson
- Joseph Henrich
- Joseph LeDoux
- Alan C. Love and William Wimsatt, eds.
- Brian Rennie
- ARTICLE REVIEWS
- Audiovisual Media
- Cognitive Poetics
- Cultural Theory
- Imagination
- Language
- Law
- Life Narratives
- Literature
- Music
- Paleoaesthetics
- Politics and Ideology
- Popular Culture
- Religion
- LETTERS
- Ruth Leys
- Reply by Rainer Reisenzein
- Contributors