Oxytocin and Mindreading
A nice short review of recent research on the link between the two. (Link courtesy of Blake Myers.)
A nice short review of recent research on the link between the two. (Link courtesy of Blake Myers.)
Craig J. Phillips is a traumatic brain injury survivor and a rehabilitation counselor. He writes: “I sustained an open skull fracture with right frontal lobe damage and remained in a coma for 3 weeks at the age of 10 in August of 1967. I underwent brain and skull surgery after waking from …
David Chalmers has posted a helpful list of recent collections of articles on consciousness.
Quite recently, more researchers are proposing a way to identify serious blog posts on peer-reviewed research. The idea seems to have originated at Cognitive Daily, and there is already a website for the project called BPR3 (Bloggers for Peer-Reviewed Research Reporting). The plan is to aggregate serious commentaries on published …
In mid-August, we lost a brilliant and multifaceted philosopher-lawyer-scientist and a warm and fascinating human being, Susan Hurley. She died young and brimming with ideas. Her interests ranged from cognitive architecture to constitutional law and from enactive perception to political action. Her book titles illustrate only some of this diversity:Natural …
The putative split between analytic and continental philosophy continues to exercise philosophers. It’s quite difficult to say what, if anything, divides them. It’s so difficult that some philosophers, led by Brian Leiter, argue that there is no longer (if there ever was) any substantive or methodological difference between the two. …
Not much, I would think. Psychology and neuroscience are empirical, scientific disciplines. Phenomenology (as conceived by Husserl) is an anti-naturalistic, a priori style of theorizing about consciousness. Well, who cares? Isn’t phenomenology “philosophically defunct” anyway? (Brian Leiter’s words in his Introduction to The Future of Philosophy, OUP, 2004.) In fact, …