The Extended Mind thesis has played a central role in contemporary philosophy of cognition by challenging internalist conceptions of the mind and emphasizing the cognitive relevance of external artifacts. However, much of the debate has oscillated between internalist resistance and forms of externalism that risk conceptual diffuseness, treating cognitive extension as a loosely bounded and context-dependent phenomenon. This paper proposes a reframing of the Extended Mind as structured cognitive scaffolding. On this view, cognitive extension is not merely a matter of functional coupling with external resources, but depends on the organization of stable, rule-governed, and functionally differentiated external structures that systematically participate in cognitive processes. Extension, therefore, is understood in architectural rather than incidental terms. To clarify this proposal, the paper introduces Nemosine as a conceptual–operational case study. Nemosine is not presented as empirical evidence or as a universal model of cognition, but as an analytical device that renders visible how structured external scaffolds can support metacognition, regulation, and distributed cognitive control without collapsing into either internalism or naïve externalism. By situating this analysis within the broader tradition of distributed cognition and Extended Mind research, the paper aims to refine the conceptual vocabulary of cognitive extension, highlighting the central role of structure, persistence, and architectural coherence in extended cognitive systems.
Edervaldo José de Souza Melo (Sun,) studied this question.