I very much think that framing the idea of “cognitive science plus math” as “the embodied mind” and “a challenge to classical western thought” is a good way to attract strong thinkers from previous contrarian fields like feminist studies who have some important insights but have a sharp divide with mainstream philosophy’s analytic methods, but may not have the kind of concrete framework for getting back to practical problems.
I very much think that framing the idea of “cognitive science plus math” as “the embodied mind” and “a challenge to classical western thought” is a good way to attract strong thinkers from previous contrarian fields like feminist studies who have some important insights but have a sharp divide with mainstream philosophy’s analytic methods, but may not have the kind of concrete framework for getting back to practical problems.