| 4. | Books about Philosophy of Mind | | | Commentaries on books and ideas from philosophers of mind including Patricia Churchland, Terrence Sejnowski, Paul Churchland, Ned Block, Owen Flanagan, Daniel Dennett, Georges Rey. www.geocities.com |
| 5. | Daniel C. Dennett - publications and preprints. | | | This page makes available online versions of many recent (1987-1997) published and unpublished articles, and reviews, by this influential and unusually readable philosopher (and by some of his associates). ase.tufts.edu |
| 6. | Cognitive Science | | | The interdisciplinary study of mind and intelligence. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Paul Thagard.. plato.stanford.edu |
| 7. | Non-Cartesian Cognitive Science. | | | Many helpfully categorized links and introductory material concerning embodied/situated approaches to cognition, ranging from Artificial Life research to Existentialism. By Ronald Lemmen. www.magneticfields.org |
| 13. | Dualism: Papers | | | Articles on dualism and parapsychology by John Beloff. moebius.psy.ed.ac.uk |
| 14. | Connectionism | | | Movement in cognitive science which hopes to explain human intellectual abilities using artificial neural networks. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by James W. Garson. plato.stanford.edu |
| 15. | Mental Representation | | | A mental representation is a mental object with semantic properties. According to the Representational Theory of Mind, psychological states are to be understood as relations between agents and mental representations. Article from the Stanford Encyclopedia, by David Pitt. plato.stanford.edu |
| 16. | Squashed Descartes | | | Condensed edition of Descartes' 'Meditations', with study notes and glossary. www.btinternet.com |
| 17. | The Identity Theory of Mind | | | Evaluates the theory that holds that states and processes of the mind are identical to states and processes of the brain. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by J. J. C. Smart. plato.stanford.edu |
| 18. | Epiphenomenalism | | | Discusses the view that mental events are caused by physical events in the brain, but have no effects upon any physical events. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by William S. Robinson. plato.stanford.edu |
| 19. | Multiple Realizability | | | Discusses the contention that a given mental kind (property, state, event) is realized by distinct physical kinds. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by John Bickle. plato.stanford.edu |
| 20. | The Pre-History of Cognitive Science | | | An annotated bibliography of the models of human cognition of Berkeley, Burton, Hobbes, and Locke. (More figures from the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries are promised.) www.rc.umd.edu |
| 23. | Exit Epiphenomenalism | | | Argues that epiphenomenalism, identity theory and parallellism are all incoherent. Unless one denies consciousness only dualistic interactionism and idealism remain viable. members.lycos.nl |
| 25. | The Unity of Consciousness | | | History and philosophical accounts of unity of consciousness; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Andrew Brook. plato.stanford.edu |
| 26. | Higher-order Theories of Consciousness | | | Theories which explain conscious states by their relations to higher-order representations of them; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by Peter Carruthers. plato.stanford.edu |
| 28. | Panpsychism | | | The doctrine that mind is a fundamental feature of the world which exists throughout the universe; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by William Seager. plato.stanford.edu |
| 29. | The Simulation Argument | | | run by a future, post-human society. Includes papers and research links. www.simulation-argument.com |
| 31. | SWIF Philosophy of Mind | | | Bibliographies by topic and author, event listings, online texts, new books (with links), and many links to online reference works, relevant institutions, journal home pages, and other sites. lgxserver.uniba.it |
| 35. | Eliminative Materialism | | | The view that some or all of the mental states posited by common-sense do not actually exist; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by William Ramsey. plato.stanford.edu |
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