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- The Unity of Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer . . .
Even though the unity of consciousness had been at the center of pre-20 th century research on the mind, early in the 20th century the notion almost disappeared Logical atomism in philosophy and behaviorism in psychology were both unsympathetic to the notion
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy organizes scholars from around the world in philosophy and related disciplines to create and maintain an up-to-date reference work
- Consciousness and Intentionality - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
1 Consciousness: Different Senses (or Kinds)? On one understanding frequent among philosophers, consciousness is a certain feature shared by sense-experience and imagery, perhaps belonging also to a broad range of other mental phenomena (e g , episodic thought, memory, and emotion)
- Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of . . .
All such theories claim that phenomenal consciousness consists in a certain kind of intentional or representational content (analog or ‘fine-grained’ in comparison with any concepts we may possess) figuring in a certain distinctive position in the causal architecture of the mind
- Representational Theories of Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of . . .
For each of the four foregoing notions of consciousness, some philosophers have claimed that that type of consciousness is entirely or largely explicable as a kind of representing This entry will deal mainly with representational theories of consciousness in senses (3) and (4)
- Kants View of the Mind and Consciousness of Self (Stanford . . .
At worst, most of what he said about the mind and consciousness can be detached from his idealism Though often viewed as a quintessentially German philosopher, Kant is said to have been one-quarter Scottish
- Table of Contents - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
aesthetics (Carolyn Korsmeyer and Peg Brand Weiser) bioethics (Jackie Leach Scully) environmental philosophy (Karen J Warren) epistemology and philosophy of science (Elizabeth Anderson) ethics (Kathryn Norlock) history of philosophy (Charlotte Witt and Lisa Shapiro) liberal feminism (Amy R Baehr) metaphysics (Katharine Jenkins, Matthew Cull
- Animal Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2004 . . .
While epistemological and related methodological issues have been at the forefront of discussions about animal consciousness, the main wave of recent philosophical attention to consciousness has been focused on ontological questions about the nature of phenomenal consciousness
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