Contenu du sommaire : Special Issue. The Emergence of Consciousness: A top-down, social phenomenon?
Revue | Pragmatics and Cognition |
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Numéro | Vol. 18, no 3, 2010 |
Titre du numéro | Special Issue. The Emergence of Consciousness: A top-down, social phenomenon? |
Special Issue. The Emergence of Consciousness: A top-down, social phenomenon? Jonathan cole and Marcelo Dascal (Eds.)
- Foreword. Why yet another debate on consciousness? - Dascal M. p. 473-479
- Introduction. The Origin of Consciousness : The background to the debate - Cole J. p. 481-495
- Core Article. What is consciousness for? - Frith C. p. 497-551
- Concluding discussion - Cole J., Dascal M., Gallagher S., Frith C. p. 553-559
- Invited Contributions. Defining consciousness: The importance of non-reflective self-awareness - Gallagher S. p. 561-569
- Large scale temporal coordination of cortical activity as prerequisite for conscious experience - Singer W. p. 570-583
- Action and awareness of agency: Comments on Christopher Frith - Bermúdez J.L. p. 584-596
- Review Articles. Tye on materialism without phenomenal concepts. Comments on : Michael Tye. Consciousness Revisited: Materialism without Phenomenal Concepts, 2009 - Senderowicz Y. p. 597-606
- Review Articles. Consciousness and the feeling body. Ralph Ellis and Natika Newton. How the Mind Uses the Brain (to Move the Body and Image the Universe), 2010 - Kiverstein J. p. 607-616