“…But the nature of this shift toward closer contact between cognitive and neural explanations is illuminating. To a large extent, this shift has been possible not so much because, through contact with neuroscientific research, cognitive scientists have begun reconceptualizing cognition in neurophysiological terms—on the contrary, the shift is for the most part due to the increasing popularity of conceptualizations of the brain and neural processes in computational-representational terms (refer to endorsements as well as critical discussions in, e.g., Posner et al, 1988 ; Sejnowski et al, 1988 ; Barlow, 1994 ; Boden, 2008 ; Neske, 2010 ; Piccinini and Bahar, 2013 ; Anderson, 2014 ; Gazzaniga, 2014 ; Brette, 2019 ). The assumption that we find already in Newell, Shaw, and Simon's work and that remains widespread today is that, whatever it does, physiologically speaking, the brain can be adequately understood as engaging in storing and processing information.…”