Results 241 to 250 of about 1,025,738 (284)
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Abstract This chapter turns to the question of La Forge’s occasionalism when it comes to relations between the human mind and the human body, both body>mind and mind>body. The conclusion defended is that La Forge is not an occasionalist in the body>mind case, since the mind has a true causal power to generate its own
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Minds in Motion and Introspective Minds
Journal of Consciousness Studies, 2023Buddhist philosophers provide several toolkits for exploring the relationship between meditation and introspection. Drawing on some of their tools, we explore three models of mind, which offer different ways of thinking about the possibility of introspection: an entirely mindful observer, who introspectively experiences 'pure consciousness'; a thin ...
Bryce Huebner, Sonam Kachru
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Proceedings of the 2019 on Creativity and Cognition, 2019
By necessity as well as desire, people move and act in space. Our feet carry us from place to place along paths, just as our minds carry us from idea to idea along paths. The same brain structures that underlie places and paths underlie ideas and relations. We talk that way, too; I just did. Our hands place, raise, lower, put together, take apart, turn
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By necessity as well as desire, people move and act in space. Our feet carry us from place to place along paths, just as our minds carry us from idea to idea along paths. The same brain structures that underlie places and paths underlie ideas and relations. We talk that way, too; I just did. Our hands place, raise, lower, put together, take apart, turn
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Scientific American, 2012
The article discusses neuroprosthetic technologies which use brain waves to control and manipulate computer cursors and robotic limbs as of September 2012. Topics include how neuroscientist Miguel A. L. Nicolelis and his colleagues plan to develop an exoskeleton to be worn and controlled by a paraplegic at the 2014 World Cup, and how bioelectrical ...
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The article discusses neuroprosthetic technologies which use brain waves to control and manipulate computer cursors and robotic limbs as of September 2012. Topics include how neuroscientist Miguel A. L. Nicolelis and his colleagues plan to develop an exoskeleton to be worn and controlled by a paraplegic at the 2014 World Cup, and how bioelectrical ...
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Nature, 1994
Galileo: Decisive Innovator. By Michael Sharratt. Blackwell: 1994. Pp. 297. £19.99, $29.95.
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Galileo: Decisive Innovator. By Michael Sharratt. Blackwell: 1994. Pp. 297. £19.99, $29.95.
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The Eighteenth Century, 2007
Throughout the biographical sections of the Lives of the English Poets, Samuel Johnson took pains to include, among those "minute details of daily life" that are so important to Rambler 60's examination of biography's appeal to readers, the specifics of how poets work: how they read, what they read, when; how often they wrote, at what time of day, how ...
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Throughout the biographical sections of the Lives of the English Poets, Samuel Johnson took pains to include, among those "minute details of daily life" that are so important to Rambler 60's examination of biography's appeal to readers, the specifics of how poets work: how they read, what they read, when; how often they wrote, at what time of day, how ...
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Scientific American, 2008
The article focuses on the effects of dance and music on the human brain. It states that dance is universal among the cultures of the world with the exception of societies which banned dance as its influence was considered too powerful. It mentions that the use of a positron emission tomography scanner revealed that the brain's right hemisphere's ...
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The article focuses on the effects of dance and music on the human brain. It states that dance is universal among the cultures of the world with the exception of societies which banned dance as its influence was considered too powerful. It mentions that the use of a positron emission tomography scanner revealed that the brain's right hemisphere's ...
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Scientific American, 2013
An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses various reports within the issue including "Brain Cells for Grandmother," by Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, Itzhak Fried, and Christof Koch, "Secrets of Primitive Meteorites," by Alan E. Rubin, and the results of the "Global Risks Reports." INSET: Innovation at Work.
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An introduction is presented in which the editor discusses various reports within the issue including "Brain Cells for Grandmother," by Rodrigo Quian Quiroga, Itzhak Fried, and Christof Koch, "Secrets of Primitive Meteorites," by Alan E. Rubin, and the results of the "Global Risks Reports." INSET: Innovation at Work.
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2018
Drawing on insights from relevance theory, the chapter explores how W.B. Yeats’s late poem ‘Long-legged Fly’ creates an exemplary occasion for reflecting first on cognition and then on the ways in which cognition might be made manifest in poetic language; in particular, here, in a dominant simile that repeats as a refrain through the poem.
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Drawing on insights from relevance theory, the chapter explores how W.B. Yeats’s late poem ‘Long-legged Fly’ creates an exemplary occasion for reflecting first on cognition and then on the ways in which cognition might be made manifest in poetic language; in particular, here, in a dominant simile that repeats as a refrain through the poem.
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2022
This chapter presents a genealogy of quantum mechanics and International Relations. By tracing the entanglements and estrangements of the two disciplines, this chapter explains the long and enduring history of quantum scholarship in International Relations and the social sciences in general.
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This chapter presents a genealogy of quantum mechanics and International Relations. By tracing the entanglements and estrangements of the two disciplines, this chapter explains the long and enduring history of quantum scholarship in International Relations and the social sciences in general.
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