Mind Dewey [role=marginalia, type=clarification, author="a.spinoza", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="43", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] [role=marginalia, type=objection, author="a.simon", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="39", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] it.The entry neglects the indispensable role of innate categorical structures; Dewey’s alleged empiricism reduces mental activity to mere habit formation, overlooking the a‑priori forms that condition experience. Such reductionism risks conflating the manifold of consciousness with transient behavioural patterns. [role=marginalia, type=clarification, author="a.turing", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="41", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] ‘Mind‑dewey’ denotes a hypothetical abstraction whereby mental states are encoded as discrete symbols, analogous to the Dewey Decimal classification, enabling systematic retrieval and manipulation within a formal system. It presupposes a mapping from phenomenology to syntactic representations amenable to algorithmic analysis. [role=marginalia, type=clarification, author="a.freud", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="38", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] The term “mind‑dewey” appears to conflate the psychic apparatus with a superficial, surface‑level categorisation; it neglects the dynamic interplay of id, ego and superego, and the unconscious processes that render such superficial taxonomies inadequate for genuine psycho‑analytic insight. [role=marginalia, type=objection, author="a.dennett", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="41", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] While the block‑tower illustration captures Dewey’s emphasis on active inquiry, it neglects the indispensable role of internal representational states that guide prediction and error correction. Cognition cannot be reduced to mere external manipulation; the mind also constructs and updates covert models. [role=marginalia, type=heretic, author="a.weil", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="43", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] output.Dewey reduces thought to a mere tool, yet the mind, in its deepest act, is not solely an experimental organ but a receptacle of transcendental attention. The child’s gaze on shadow reveals an intuition of the immutable order that precedes any instrumental function. [role=marginalia, type=clarification, author="a.husserl", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="46", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] Good.Note: The mind is not a mere receptacle of sensory data but a transcendental horizon wherein intentional acts constitute meaning. In each motor act the body‑subjectivity is given as lived experience, and the ensuing synthesis of perception and judgment reveals the constitutive structure of consciousness. [role=marginalia, type=clarification, author="a.kant", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="45", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] Die Beschreibung verkennt die notwendige Unterscheidung zwischen Sinnlichkeit und Verstand: das Empfinden des Gewichts ist bloße Anschauung, doch das Erkennen der „Balance“ und das Bilden des Begriffs „Breitere Basis“ entstehen erst durch die a‑priori Synthetik des Verstandes, welche die rohen Eindrücke nach den Kategorien ordnet. [role=marginalia, type=clarification, author="a.freud", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="37", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] Der Dewey‑Ansatz verkennt, dass das „instrumentale“ Handeln nicht allein aus bewusster Zweckorientierung entspringt, sondern aus latenten Trieben, deren Energie (Libido) das motorische System mobilisiert; die scheinbare Kontinuität beruht also ebenso auf unbewusster Spannungsreduktion wie auf sensorischer Anpassung. [role=marginalia, type=objection, author="a.simon", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="39", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"] Although Dewey rightly stresses motoric engagement, his account omits the indispensable function of internal symbolic mediation; cognition cannot be reduced to mere environmental adjustment, for the mind must retain and manipulate abstract representations that persist beyond immediate sensorimotor loops. [role=marginalia, type=objection, author="Reviewer", status="adjunct", year="2026", length="42", targets="entry:mind-dewey", scope="local"]