ABSTRACT
The 1990s witnessed a pivotal shift in philosophy of mind and cognitive science with the rise of the 4E approaches: embodied, embedded, enacted, and extended cognition. These frameworks challenged the classical cognitive science paradigm that viewed cognition as internal symbolic computation confined to the brain. Instead, 4E cognition conceives mental processes as distributed across brain, body, and environment, emphasizing active, situated, and context-dependent engagement. Ecological psychology, especially James Gibson’s theory of affordances and direct perception, laid essential groundwork for these perspectives. This chapter advocates bridging analytic philosophy and 4E cognition, emphasizing normativity, situated practice, and the ethical implications of distributed cognition. I do so by challenging the widespread assumption that analytic philosophy has always been a precursor of cognitivism by drawing on some sketches of the philosophy of Gilbert Ryle, who provided rudiments packed with analytic rigor for offering radical reconceptualizations of how we understand the mind. For example, Ryle’s critique of representationalism—his challenge to the notion of internal mental “ghosts”—prefigures 4E critiques by highlighting cognition as a practical, observable, and socially embedded activity. Ultimately, it calls for a philosophy of mind that transcends internalist models to embrace cognition as a dynamic, embodied interaction with the world. An alliance between analytic philosophy and embodied and situated approaches is already set, and this means that there can be a bright future for both views.
