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Brain theory : = essays in critical ...
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Palgrave Connect (Online service)
Brain theory : = essays in critical neurophilosophy /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Brain theory :/ edited by Charles T. Wolfe.
Reminder of title:
essays in critical neurophilosophy /
other author:
Wolfe, Charles T.,
Description:
1 online resource.
Subject:
Neurosciences - Philosophy. -
Online resource:
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230369580
ISBN:
0230369588 (electronic bk.)
Brain theory : = essays in critical neurophilosophy /
Brain theory :
essays in critical neurophilosophy /edited by Charles T. Wolfe. - 1 online resource.
1. Introduction; Charles Wolfe -- 2. Memory Traces Between Brain Theory and Philosophy; Jean-Claude Dupont -- 3. Pain and the Nature of Psychological Attributes; Stephen Gaukroger -- 4. Is the Next Frontier in Neuroscience a 'Decade of the Mind'?; Jackie Sullivan -- 5. Neuroconstructivism: A Developmental Turn in Cognitive Neuroscience?; Denis Forest -- 6. Computing with Bodies: Morphology, Function, and Computational Theory; John Symons and Paco Calvo -- 7. Embodied Collaboration in Small Groups; Kellie Williamson and John Sutton -- 8. Little-E Eliminativism in Mainstream Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience: Tensions for Neuro-Normativity; John Bickle -- 9. Ethics and the Brains of Psychopaths: The Significance of Psychopaths for Ethical and Legal Reasoning; William Hirstein and Katrina Sifferd -- 10. Memory Traces, Memory Errors,and the Possibility of Neural Lie Detection; Sarah K. Robins -- 11. Feminist Approaches to Neurocultures; Sigrid Schmitz -- 12. Non-Reductive Integration in Social Cognitive Neuroscience: Multiple Systems Model and Situated Concepts; Luc Faucher -- 13. History, Causal Information, and the Neuroscience of Art: Toward a Psycho-Historical Theory; Nicolas Bullot -- 14. The Architectonics of the Mind's Eye in the Age of Cognitive Capitalism; Warren Neidich.
From its beginnings until the present day, neuroscience has always had a special relationship to philosophy. And philosophy has long puzzled over the relation between mind and brain (and by extension, the relation of cerebral processes to freedom, morals, and justice, but also to perception and art). This volume presents some of the state-of-the-art reflections on philosophical efforts to 'make sense' of neuroscience, as regards issues including neuroaesthetics, neuroethics and neurolaw, but also more critical, evaluative perspectives on topics such as the social neuroscience of race, neurofeminism, embodiment and collaboration, memory and pain, and more directly empirical topics such as neuroconstructivism and embodied robotics. Brain theory as presented here is neither mere commentary on the state of the sciences, nor armchair philosophical reflection on traditional topics. It is more pluralistic than current philosophy of neuroscience (or neurophenomenology), yet more directly engaged with empirical, indeed experimental matters than socio-cultural discussions of 'brainhood' or representations of the brain.
ISBN: 0230369588 (electronic bk.)
Source: 565602Palgrave Macmillanhttp://www.palgraveconnect.comSubjects--Topical Terms:
563878
Neurosciences
--Philosophy.Index Terms--Genre/Form:
554714
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: QP356
Dewey Class. No.: 128/.2
Brain theory : = essays in critical neurophilosophy /
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1. Introduction; Charles Wolfe -- 2. Memory Traces Between Brain Theory and Philosophy; Jean-Claude Dupont -- 3. Pain and the Nature of Psychological Attributes; Stephen Gaukroger -- 4. Is the Next Frontier in Neuroscience a 'Decade of the Mind'?; Jackie Sullivan -- 5. Neuroconstructivism: A Developmental Turn in Cognitive Neuroscience?; Denis Forest -- 6. Computing with Bodies: Morphology, Function, and Computational Theory; John Symons and Paco Calvo -- 7. Embodied Collaboration in Small Groups; Kellie Williamson and John Sutton -- 8. Little-E Eliminativism in Mainstream Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience: Tensions for Neuro-Normativity; John Bickle -- 9. Ethics and the Brains of Psychopaths: The Significance of Psychopaths for Ethical and Legal Reasoning; William Hirstein and Katrina Sifferd -- 10. Memory Traces, Memory Errors,and the Possibility of Neural Lie Detection; Sarah K. Robins -- 11. Feminist Approaches to Neurocultures; Sigrid Schmitz -- 12. Non-Reductive Integration in Social Cognitive Neuroscience: Multiple Systems Model and Situated Concepts; Luc Faucher -- 13. History, Causal Information, and the Neuroscience of Art: Toward a Psycho-Historical Theory; Nicolas Bullot -- 14. The Architectonics of the Mind's Eye in the Age of Cognitive Capitalism; Warren Neidich.
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From its beginnings until the present day, neuroscience has always had a special relationship to philosophy. And philosophy has long puzzled over the relation between mind and brain (and by extension, the relation of cerebral processes to freedom, morals, and justice, but also to perception and art). This volume presents some of the state-of-the-art reflections on philosophical efforts to 'make sense' of neuroscience, as regards issues including neuroaesthetics, neuroethics and neurolaw, but also more critical, evaluative perspectives on topics such as the social neuroscience of race, neurofeminism, embodiment and collaboration, memory and pain, and more directly empirical topics such as neuroconstructivism and embodied robotics. Brain theory as presented here is neither mere commentary on the state of the sciences, nor armchair philosophical reflection on traditional topics. It is more pluralistic than current philosophy of neuroscience (or neurophenomenology), yet more directly engaged with empirical, indeed experimental matters than socio-cultural discussions of 'brainhood' or representations of the brain.
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