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Mind

The mind refers to the set of cognitive faculties that enable conscious experience, perception, thought, memory, emotion, imagination, language, and agency. It is often described as distinct from the physical brain, though many views treat the mind as an emergent property of neural activity rather than a separate substance.

Core mental processes include perception, attention, learning, memory encoding and retrieval, reasoning, problem solving, language, and

The study of the mind spans philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, cognitive science, linguistics, and artificial intelligence. The

Evolutionary perspectives view the mind as adapted for navigating social environments, predicting outcomes, and guiding behavior.

In artificial intelligence discourse, the term mind is used to describe intelligent functioning, prompting questions about

emotion.
Conscious
experience
is
the
subjective
aspect
of
these
processes,
while
much
of
mental
life
operates
implicitly
through
unconscious
processing.
The
mind
supports
processes
such
as
decision
making,
planning,
self-awareness,
and
creativity.
brain
mediates
mental
states,
with
regions
such
as
the
prefrontal
cortex,
hippocampus,
and
amygdala
contributing
to
planning,
memory,
and
emotion.
Theories
about
the
mind
range
from
dualism,
which
posits
distinct
mental
and
physical
substances,
to
physicalism
or
materialism,
which
equate
mental
states
with
brain
states
or
their
causal
roles,
and
functionalism,
which
emphasizes
the
organizing
principles
of
mental
processes.
This
includes
perception,
learning
from
experience,
language,
and
cultural
transmission.
Research
seeks
to
model
mental
processes
computationally,
explain
mental
disorders,
and
understand
how
cognition
supports
behavior.
machine
consciousness
versus
simulated
intelligence
and
the
differences
between
weak
and
strong
AI.