Non-local Aspects of Cognition
Journal of Consciousness Studies June 1, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.53765/20512201.33.5.219 via OpenAlex
Summary
The article examines non-local aspects of cognition, challenging the notion that cognition is solely tied to a subject's intrinsic mental abilities or their spatial and temporal context. It discusses concepts such as extended mind and distributed cognition, while also addressing the controversial topic of extra-sensory perception (ESP) and its potential implications for understanding consciousness. Despite significant experimental results supporting ESP, it is largely dismissed by the scientific community.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | The article highlights that extra-sensory perception (ESP) may provide evidence for non-local aspects of cognition, despite being largely ignored by current cognitive science. |
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Abstract
This article explores non-local aspects of cognition in two main directions, respectively contradicting the idea that 1) the term ‘cognition’ exclusively refers to the cognitive subject’s intrinsic mental aptitudes and that 2) it is exclusively centred on the subject’s spatial and temporal localization. Following 4E cognition, the first direction mentions quite reasonable externalist and multiscale aspects of cognition by referring in turn to Clark’s and Chalmers’ concept of extended mind, social cognition, Hutchins’ concept of distributed cognition, and Laurent’s multiscale enaction model. The second direction to be explored puts into question the spatio-temporal locality of cognition since it refers to the possibility of extra-sensory perception (ESP). The reality of ESP is suggested by non-reductive solutions to the problem of consciousness, and it is supported by very significant experimental results. The millenary interest in ESP will be mentioned, with a special focus on Hinduism for its explicit reference in the Yoga Sutra. Some significant experimental tests aimed to show its existence and some hints for building a theoretical modelling of it will then be presented. Reasons why the reality of ESP is generally rejected by the scientific community despite numerous significant experimental results, as well as philosophical justifications and theoretical advances, will be discussed. This article pays particular attention to the second sense of ‘non-local’, based on the possibility of ESP, in so far as this disturbing but rigorous scientific field of research is almost completely ignored by current studies in cognitive science.