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2018, vol. 10, br. 2, str. 143-156
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Epistemološke implikacije neuroarhitekture
Epistemological implications of neuroarchitecture
Sažetak
Ovaj rad će pokušati da objasni kako prostorne karakteristike izgrađenih okruženja utiču i na kognitivne procese proizvodnje znanja i epistemički kvalitet drugih logika ubeđenja. Skorije diskusije u filozofiji i društvenim naukama eksplicitno govore o promenjivoj dinamici savremenog života. Kako zamagljene granice između rada i slobodnog vremena primoravaju pojedince da utroše najveći deo svog vremena u izgrađenim okruženjima , lična iskustva prostora, objekata i enterijera postaju odlučujući faktor u samo-percepciji i spoznaji. Ove okolnosti su ohrabrile dolazak nove naučne oblasti: neuroarhitekture, ogranka funkcionalnog dizajna podržanog tehnologijom neurološkog skeniranja mozga i konceptom neuroplastičnosti, odnosno kapaciteta mozga da promeni svoju strukturu paralelno sa našim ponašanjem i okolinom. Ovaj rad nakon razmatranja ambicija neuroarhitekture da definiše najpoželjnije prostore po kriterijumu pozitivnih emocija, dobrog zdravlja, i intelektualne krepkosti, kritički će proceniti svoje epistemološke implikacije i njen potencijalno nepovoljan uticaj na arhitektonsku estetsku autonomiju. Ovaj upliv prirodnih nauka u prividno artistički domen arhitekture podseća nas na razlike između tradicionalnih analitičkih filozofija - koje su se bavile idealizovanim modelima intelektualnih i mentalnih procesa - i uvidom nauke u ljudske spoznaje, možda najbolje ilustrovana teorijom identiteta uma-mozga.
Abstract
This article will attempt to explain how the spatial characteristics of built environments affect both the cognitive processes of producing knowledge and the epistemic quality of other doxastic states. Recent discussions in philosophy and the social sciences have been vocal about the changing dynamics of contemporary life. As clouded boundaries between labor and leisure make individuals spend most of their time in built environments, personal experiences of space, buildings, and interiors are becoming a decisive factor in self-perception and cognition. These circumstances have encouraged the advent of a new scientific field: neuro-architecture, a branch of functional design supported by neurological brain scanning technologies and the concept of neuroplasticity, the brain's capacity to change its structure along our behavior and surroundings. After articulating neuro-architecture's ambition to define spaces most suitable for promoting positive emotions, good health, and intellectual agility, the article will critically assess its epistemological implications and its potentially unfavorable impact on architectural aesthetic autonomy. This intrusion of natural sciences into the ostensibly artistic domain of architecture bears certain similarities to the tension between traditional analytic philosophy - which was preoccupied with idealized models of intellectual practices and mental processes - and scientific insights into human cognition, perhaps best illustrated by the mind-brain identity theory.
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