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The Embodied Mind

Varela, Thompson, and Rosch's 1991 MIT Press landmark — the book that introduced enactivism to cognitive science and integrated autopoietic biology, Merleau-Pontyan phenomenology, and Buddhist philosophy into a single framework.
The Embodied Mind: Cognitive Science and Human Experience was the most consequential work of Varela's middle career. Co-authored with philosopher Evan Thompson and psychologist Eleanor Rosch, the book synthesized three previously separate intellectual streams — Varela and Maturana's biological work on autopoiesis, Maurice Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology of embodiment, and Buddhist psychological analysis of experience — into a unified challenge to the representational paradigm that had dominated cognitive science since the 1950s. The book argued that cognition is not the manipulation of internal representations of a pregiven world but the activity by which an embodied organism brings forth a domain of significance through its sensorimotor engagement with an environment.
The Embodied Mind
The Embodied Mind

In The You On AI Field Guide

The book's timing was strategic. By 1991, the limits of symbolic AI were becoming visible: systems that reasoned brilliantly in formal domains but failed catastrophically in real-world contexts. Connectionism had risen as an alternative but retained the representational framework at a different level. Varela, Thompson,

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