Philosophy of Mind
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- A Field Guide to the Philosophy of Mind
- Survey articles on key issues in the field, and an annotated bibliography.
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- An atheist philosophy beyond the "bright" attitude
- The naturalism of the Bright Movement is present in Real Dualism, but even an anthropologic analysis that get over the traditional materialism
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- Arts and Minds
- Contains theory and essays by Mayer Spivack. Primarily emphasizes human cognition, animal cognition, associative reasoning (syncretic reasoning), creativity, learning and learning disability.
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- Center for Consciousness Studies at the University of Arizona.
- The main institutional center for Consciousness Studies. Host of the Tucson "Toward a Science of Consciousness" conferences, and periodically stages on-line courses on aspects of Consciousness Studies.
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- Cognitive Science
- The interdisciplinary study of mind and intelligence. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by Paul Thagard..
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- Computing Machinery and Intelligence
- The classic 1950 article by Alan Turing on machine intelligence, where he introduces the famous Turing test.
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- Connectionism
- Movement in cognitive science which hopes to explain human intellectual abilities using artificial neural networks. From the Stanford Encyclopedia, by James W. Garson.
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- Consciousness and Intentionality
- Discussion of the connection between phenomenal consciousness and intentionality; by Charles Siewert.
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- Contemporary Philosophy of Mind: An Annotated Bibliography
- Thousands of entries, categorized by subject matter. From David Chalmers.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- Panpsychism
- The doctrine that mind is a fundamental feature of the world which exists throughout the universe; from the Stanford Encyclopedia by William Seager.