In this episode of "Awakening from the Meaning Crisis," Dr. John Vervaeke delves into the cognitive science of intelligence, focusing on relevance realization as a core component of general problem-solving. He critiques Newell and Simon's work, highlighting their essentialist heuristic bias, and emphasizes the importance of problem formulation and insight in overcoming combinatorial explosion and ill-defined problems. Vervaeke argues that categorization, communication, and even basic survival mechanisms hinge on the ability to discern relevant information, illustrating this with examples like the mutilated chessboard, the robot and the battery problem, and Grice's maxims of communication. He proposes that relevance realization is not just a cognitive function but is deeply intertwined with salience, motivation, and our capacity for wisdom, self-transcendence, and meaning-making, suggesting it holds the key to addressing the meaning crisis by regenerating connections between mind, body, and world.
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