Graduate course offered in Winter 2020/21, Summer 2021 and Winter 2021/22 to small groups (<10) of master’s and PhD students from various programs at TU Berlin, including psychology, neuroscience, human factors, computer science, human-computer interaction, and design.

The course is divided in two parts: (1) a lecture series followed by discussion sessions and a (2) seminar series with student presentations and discussion sessions.

(This course is a graduate-level elaboration of my undergraduate course PHIL1006 Introduction to Cognitive Studies, taught at the University of Cincinnati in Summer 2018. Information about the undergraduate version is available upon request.)

Course Description

An increasingly popular trend in the sciences of the mind is to emphasize the ways in which cognition is embodied, embedded, situated, extended, distributed, enactive, ecological, etc. This course combines lectures and seminars to provide an introduction to these and other approaches that fall under the umbrella of “embodied cognitive science.” The first part of the course will be lecture-based and will focus on the history and the theoretical and methodological foundations of embodied cognitive science. Having covered the basic concepts and approaches, in the second part we will turn to discussion-based seminars on cutting-edge topics in embodied cognitive science, with a special focus on the nature of affordances and their relation to the environment and to sociocultural practices.

Foundational topics discussed include: behaviorism and the cognitive revolution; the phenomenological and pragmatist traditions; the computational theory of mind and criticisms of classical computationalism; connectionism and its philosophical implications.

Topics within embodied cognitive science include: conceptual and motor grounding; distributed cognition, wide computationalism, and the extended mind; anti-representationalism in evolutionary robotics and dynamical systems theory; the enactive approach and central elements such as autonomy, sense-making and autopoiesis; ecological psychology and central elements such as its theory of direct perception and affordances.


Student work


Sample of readings from Part 1 (lecture + discussion)


Sample of topics & readings from Part 2 (student presentations + discussion)


Sample of student comments (from Winter 2020/21 and Summer 2021):