On the Prospects of Basal Cognition Research Becoming Fully Evolutionary: Promising Avenues and Cautionary Notes
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The research programme ‘basal cognition’ adopts an evolutionary perspective for studying biological cognition. This entails investigating possible cognitive processes in ‘simple’–often non-neuronal–organisms as a means to discover conserved mechanisms and adaptive capacities underwriting cognition in more complex (neuronal) organisms. However, by pulling in the opposite direction of a tradition that views cognition as something that is unique to neuronal organisms, basal cognition has been met with a fair amount of scepticism by philosophers and scientists. The very idea of approaching cognition by way of investigating the behaviour and underlying mechanisms in, say, bacteria, has been seen as preposterous and harmful to both cognitive science and biology. This paper aims to temper such scepticism to a certain degree by drawing parallels with how the evolution of ‘development,’ another loaded concept that refers to a not-so-easily definable, contested bundle of phenomena, has been fruitfully approached in Evolutionary Developmental Biology (Evo-Devo). Through this comparison, we identify four promising features of the basal cognition approach. These features suggest that sweeping scepticism may be unwarranted. However, each of them comes with important epistemic cautionary notes that should not be disregarded. By presenting these twofold considerations as potential ways to integrate a fully evolutionary perspective into basal cognition, this paper seeks to provide clarity and direction for the advancement of this research programme.
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Acknowledgements: We thank Carrie Figdor and Fred Keijzer for their helpful comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. We also acknowledge the feedback from attendees and participants at the BSPS 2024 Annual Conference’s symposium “The Many Implications of Basal Cognition for the Philosophy of Science” at the University of York (July 2024) and the CEFISES Seminar (MolDevBio series) at UCLouvain (December 2024). Likewise, we thank the two anonymous reviewers of this journal for their helpful feedback. MS acknowledges the generous support from the VolkswagenStiftung. AFT is grateful to The Ramsey Lab at KU Leuven and to the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) for their financial support—in particular, for grant G070122N. MS is currently a part of the Major Transitions in Cognitive Evolution project, supported by grant no. TWCF-2020-20539 from the Templeton World Charity Foundation, awarded to A. B. Barron, M. Halina and C. Klein, all of whom he is incredibly grateful to.
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1742-6316
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Templeton World Charity Foundation (TWCF-2020-20539)

