Armin Schulz's Efficient Cognition is a groundbreaking study of the nature and evolution of decision making. This beautifully written book demonstrates the importance of evolutionary thinking to theorize about the evolution of cognition.
Edouard Machery, Distinguished Professor, University of Pittsburgh, Department of History and Philosophy of Science; author of Doing without Concepts and Philosophy within Its Proper Bounds
In this cogent book, Schulz marshals evidence from across disciples to explain the evolution of representational decision making. This book is a must-read for scholars in philosophy, psychology, evolutionary biology, or the cognitive sciences who are interested in how decision making evolved.
Sarah F. Brosnan, Professor of Psychology, Philosophy & Neuroscience, Georgia State University
To understand the human mind, you must understand representations. But it seems that the centrality of representations, once taken for granted, has been under attack for years now. This book is an essential corrective—addressing the what, the how, and especially the why for representations in decision making.
Ron Mallon, Professor and Chair Department of Philosophy; Director, Philosophy-Neuroscience-Psychology Program, Washington University in St. Louis; author of The Construction of Human Kinds
[A] highly original, and empirically well-informed, account of the evolutionary drivers of representational decision making.
Biology & Philosophy
[Schulz's] book sets an admirable standard.
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews