“…In addition to the forms of cognition associated with specific biological taxa (e.g., avian cognition, primate cognition, human cognition, and so on), the cognitive science literature is littered with terms and concepts referring to 'cognitive kinds' of a somewhat more esoteric nature. These include extended cognition [7,102,108], embedded cognition [417,418], scaffolded cognition [16,483], embodied cognition [11,432,433,434,435], situated cognition [409], distributed cognition [240,254,255], group cognition [381,498,499], social cognition [288], enactive cognition [141], grounded cognition [28,29,386], augmented cognition [477], metacognition [396], and so on. Cognition, it seems, is a many varied (or at least a multi-faceted) thing, and the medley of cognitive flavors on offer seems to be of sufficient richness as to rival the offerings of even the most cosmopolitan of Italian gelaterias.…”