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Jul 1999
ISBN 0262201151
392 pp.
20 illus.
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The Race for Consciousness
John G. Taylor

There is a sense among scientists that the time is finally ripe for the problem of consciousness to be solved once and for all. The development of new experimental and theoretical tools for probing the brain has produced an atmosphere of unparalleled optimism that the job can now be done properly: The race for consciousness is on!

In this book, John Taylor describes the complete scene of entries, riders, gamblers, and racecourses. He presents his own entry into the race, which he has been working on for the past twenty-five years--the relational theory of consciousness, according to which consciousness is created through the relations between brain states, especially those involving memories of personal experiences. Because it is an ongoing and adaptive process, consciousness emerges from past brain activity. It is this highly subtle and delicate process of emergence that leads to the complexity of consciousness. Taylor does not just present another theory of consciousness, but makes comprehensible the nuts-and-bolts methodology behind the myriad attempts to win the race.

Table of Contents
 Preface
 Acknowledgments
I Introduction to Consciousness
1 The Race Begins
2 The Nature of the Conscious Mind
3 The Racecourse of Consciousness
II Looking at Consciousness
4 New Windows on the Mind
5 Past Models of Consciousness
6 Relational Consciousness
III Building the Components of Consciousness
7 The Global Gate to Consciousness
8 Winning Control
9 Breakthrough to Awareness
10 Active Consciousness
11 The Emergence of Self
IV The Hard Problem of Consciousness
12 Return to Relational Consciousness
13 Where the Raw Feels Come From
14 How Does Consciousness Emerge?
V Aspects of Relational Consciousness
15 The Varieties of Consciousness
16 Philosophical Questions
17 A Scientific Model of the Mind?
 Notes
 References
 Index
 
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