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  • Published: 11 June 2024
  • ISBN: 9780262547086
  • Imprint: MIT Press Academic
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $95.00

The Cognitive Life of Maps




The “mapness of maps”—how maps live in interaction with their users, and what this tells us about what they are and how they work.

The “mapness of maps”—how maps live in interaction with their users, and what this tells us about what they are and how they work.

In a sense, maps are temporarily alive for those who design, draw, and use them. They have, for the moment, a cognitive life. To grapple with what this means—to ask how maps can be alive, and what kind of life they have—is to explore the core question of what maps are. And this is what Roberto Casati does in The Cognitive Life of Maps, in the process assembling the conceptual tools for understanding why maps have the power they have, why they are so widely used, and how we use (and misuse) them.

Drawing on insights from cognitive science and philosophy of mind, Casati considers the main claims around what maps are and how they work—their specific syntax, peculiar semantics, and pragmatics. He proposes a series of steps that can lead to a precise theory of maps, one that reveals what maps have in common with diagrams, pictures, and texts, and what makes them different. This minimal theory of maps helps us to see maps nested in many cognitive artifacts—clock faces, musical notation, writing, calendars, and numerical series, for instance. It also allows us to tackle the issue of the territorialization of maps—to show how maps can be used to draw specific spatial inferences about territories. From the mechanics of maps used for navigation to the differences and similarities between maps and pictures and models, Casati's ambitious work is a cognitive map in its own right, charting the way to a new understanding of what maps mean.

  • Published: 11 June 2024
  • ISBN: 9780262547086
  • Imprint: MIT Press Academic
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $95.00

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Praise for The Cognitive Life of Maps

Praise for The Visual World of Shadows:

“Casati’s short, lively book . . . will delight.” —San Francisco Chronicle

“Striking. . . . Shadows succeeds in throwing a little light on the Dark Side.” —Seed

“A refined chronicle of art and science.” —Booklist

“A blend of scientific inquiry and philosophy. . . . Casati comes up with some enlightening answers.” —San Diego Union-Tribune

“Beyond a shadow of doubt—this book is destined to become a classic. We usually regard shadows as a device for accentuating the artistic appeal of pictures, not as a subject worthy of scientific study. Casati and Cavanagh dispel this view using cleverly designed experiments to illuminate the science underlying the world of shadows.”—V. S. Ramachandran, Distinguished Professor, University of California, San Diego; author of The Tell-Tale Brain

"This boundary-crossing monograph will appeal to readers interested in either or both fields: visual arts and human perception ...While its language is certainly accessible to a general audience, the work will probably find its most enthusiastic readership among an academic or quasi-academic population."—Choice