Minds in the wild: conceptualizing and attributing the mental among Mongolians

MSCA (Marie Skłodowska-Curie)HORIZON-TMA-MSCA-PF-EFID: 101060281
EC Contribution
€2,308
Consortium Size
1 orgs
Start Year
2022
Summary

The term “mind” is as much an everyday word in English language as it is a technical term widely used across various sub-disciplines in the cognitive sciences. And it is not uncommon to see the English-based understanding of mind as representing a universal category of human thought. No doubt, our basic ability to understand various mental states that we attribute to others and to ourselves is crucial for our social life. This has been acknowledged by the Theory of Mind (ToM) research tradition, and more recently by mind perception research. Still, the English term ""mind"" has remained a starting conceptual point for studying the folk theory of mind as universal. This state of affairs is problematic since there is little systematic non-English cross-cultural data about the very concept of “mind” or how the mental sphere is categorized and organized. This is especially noteworthy given the fact that many languages do not even have an equivalent lexical expression of English “mind”– it might as well be a culture-specific concept, infused with specific semantic connotations. Thus, this project will (1) bring a richer cultural perspective to the study of the folk concept of mind by investigating in-depth Mongolian cultural model of mind and comparing it to the dominant English-language based model of mind

Consortium (1)

Project Results (7)

Source: CORDIS, the EU research results database.

Publications (3)
Cultural Models Are Intrinsically Normative
Culture, Mind, and Society, Cognition In and Out of the Mind· 2024DOI
Renatas Berniūnas
Invisible Rituals
Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion· 2024DOI
Renatas Berniūnas
The poverty of contentless culture
Religion, Brain & Behavior· 2024DOI
Renatas Berniūnas
Deliverables (3)
Other Results (1)
Periodic Reporting for period 1 - WILDMINDS (Minds in the wild: conceptualizing and attributing the mental among Mongolians)