Phenomenolgy & the Cognitive Sciences
The recent issue of Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences contains articles on topics such as: self-awareness schizophrenia and threat perception memory and the brain the philosophy of neuroscience Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences Volume 4 Number 3 is now available on the Springer web site. To go directly to the issue, click here This issue […]
The recent issue of Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences contains articles on topics such as:
- self-awareness
- schizophrenia and threat perception
- memory and the brain
- the philosophy of neuroscience
Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences
Volume 4 Number 3 is now available on the Springer web site.
To go directly to the issue, click here
This issue contains:
- Precis of Philosophy and Neuroscience: A Ruthlessly Reductive Account, John Bickle abstract
- Resisting ruthless reductionism: A comment on Bickle, Tim Bayne, Jordi FernAndez abstract
- A matter of facts, DorothEe Legrand, Franck Grammont go to article
- The shape of things to come: Psychoneural reduction and the future of psychology, Joseph U. Neisser go to article
- Is the brain a memory box?, Anne J. Jacobson go to article
- The mind reduced to molecules?, Verena Gottschling go to article
- Replies, John Bickle go to article
- The roots of self-awareness, Michael L. Anderson, Donald R. Perlis go to article
- Schizophrenia and the experience of intersubjectivity as threatPaul Henry Lysaker, Jason K. Johannesen, John Timothy Lysaker go to article
- Book review: Imagination and the Meaningful Brain, Jung-In Kwon go to article
TZR