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Testing the Conjecture That Quantum Processes Create Conscious Experience. [PDF]
Neven H +8 more
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Caring for the world: Geography, Religious Cosmovision and Encounters, Elizabeth Wilson's 'actionist' career, 1943-1990'. [PDF]
Taithe B.
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A new variant of the electromagnetic field theory of consciousness: approaches to empirical confirmation. [PDF]
Strupp W.
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'Why can't you just be fine?': An autoethnography of self-harm from a lived experience and nursing perspective. [PDF]
da Cunha Lewin C.
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Abstract The main topic of this paper is the connection between facing death and a special kind of solitariness. Heidegger talks about the kind of anxiety, the feeling of uncanniness, of Unheimlichkeit (not-at-homeness), that must attend coming to grips with mortality.
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2018
‘Solipsism’ (from the Latin solus ipse – oneself alone) is the doctrine that only oneself exists. This formulation covers two doctrines, each of which has been called solipsism, namely (1) that one is the only self, the only centre of consciousness, and, more radically, (2) that nothing at all exists apart from one’s own mind and mental states.
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‘Solipsism’ (from the Latin solus ipse – oneself alone) is the doctrine that only oneself exists. This formulation covers two doctrines, each of which has been called solipsism, namely (1) that one is the only self, the only centre of consciousness, and, more radically, (2) that nothing at all exists apart from one’s own mind and mental states.
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Psychological Reports, 1993
This paper describes how a schizophrenic, torn by painful feelings of centrality, may resort to a form of solipsism, contending that horrific historical processes like World War II occurred not in external history but in his own mind.
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This paper describes how a schizophrenic, torn by painful feelings of centrality, may resort to a form of solipsism, contending that horrific historical processes like World War II occurred not in external history but in his own mind.
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Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology, 1977
(1977). Husserl's Solipsism. Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology: Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 123-125.
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(1977). Husserl's Solipsism. Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology: Vol. 8, No. 2, pp. 123-125.
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