@article {913, title = {INTERDISCIPLINARITY IN EDUCATION}, journal = {Problems of Education in the 21st Century}, volume = {61}, year = {2014}, month = {October/2014}, pages = {Discontinuous}, type = {Editorial}, chapter = {5-8}, abstract = {Questions about the nature of the teaching/learning process originate in ancient Greek philosophy. What is the role of language? What is the relationship between the individuals? Are we free in our choices? Important ancient philosophers, Democritus, Plato, Aristotle and Lucretius answered these questions in different ways, while Descartes, Spinoza, Hume, Kant and many others continued where they left off. Even today in the Age of Technology, contemporary researchers from the fields of philosophy, cognitive science, neurobiology, and artificial intelligence ask similar, albeit technologically informed, questions. Among these, there are also questions about the relationship between humans and machines, and implications which they carry for solving traditional problems within philosophy, i.e. the mind-body problem, mental causation problem and the problem of consciousness. }, keywords = {artificial Intelligence, cognitive modelling in education, cognitive scientists, teaching/learning process}, issn = {1822-7864}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.33225/pec/14.61.05}, url = {http://oaji.net/articles/2015/457-1422203467.pdf}, author = {Boris Aber{\v s}ek} }