 |
| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
|
Volume 27
Issue 5 |
| Oct 01, 2004 |
|
ISSN: 0140525x |
 |
|
Behavioral and Brain Sciences
|  |
Volume 27 :
Issue 5
Table of Contents
|
-
What to say to a skeptical metaphysician: A defense manual for cognitive and behavioral scientists

Don Ross and David Spurrett
Page 603-627
-
Metaphysics, mind, and the unity of science

David Boersema
Page 627-628
-
Ontological disunity and a realism worth having

Steve Clarke
Page 628-629
-
Reduction, supervenience, and physical emergence

John Collier
Page 629-630
-
Supervenience: Not local and not two-way

James Ladyman
Page 630-630
-
Causation, supervenience, and special sciences

Graham Macdonald
Page 631-631
-
Functionalism without multiple supervenience

Ausonio Marras
Page 632-632
-
Really taking metaphysics seriously

Barbara Montero
Page 632-633
-
The vessels and the glue: Space, time, and causation

Andrei Rodin
Page 633-634
-
Causation is only part of the answer

Matthias Scheutz
Page 634-635
-
Functionalism, emergence, and collective coordinates: A statistical physics perspective on What to say to a skeptical metaphysician

Cosma Rohilla Shalizi
Page 635-636
-
Protecting cognitive science from quantum theory

David Wallace
Page 636-637
-
The cognitive and behavioral sciences: Real patterns, real unity, real causes, but no supervenience

Don Ross and David Spurrett
Page 637-647
-
Prcis of The illusion of conscious will

Daniel M. Wegner
Page 649-659
-
The self is virtual, the will is not illusory

George Ainslie
Page 659-660
-
The experience of will: Affective or cognitive?

Joseph E. Bogen
Page 660-661
-
Calling in the Cartesian loans

Daniel C. Dennett
Page 661-661
-
We believe in freedom of the will so that we can learn

Clark Glymour
Page 661-662
-
The elusive illusion of sensation

Valerie Gray Hardcastle
Page 662-663
-
The sense of conscious will

Gene M. Heyman
Page 663-664
-
How neuroscience accounts for the illusion of conscious will

Masao Ito
Page 664-665
-
The illusory triumph of machine over mind: Wegners eliminativism and the real promise of psychology

Anthony I. Jack and Philip Robbins
Page 665-666
-
An unwarrantable impertinence

John F. Kihlstrom
Page 666-667
-
Hypnosis and will

Irving Kirsch and Steven Jay Lynn
Page 667-668
-
Experimental psychology cannot solve the problem of conscious will (yet we must try)

Joachim I. Krueger
Page 668-669
-
Free will for everyone with flaws

George Mandler
Page 669-669
-
Inferences are just folk psychology

Thomas Metzinger
Page 670-670
-
Differentiating dissociation and repression

John Morton
Page 670-671
-
Free will and the varieties of affective and conative selves

Jaak Panksepp
Page 671-672
-
The illusion of explanation: The experience of volition, mental effort, and mental imagery

Zenon Pylyshyn
Page 672-673
-
A social psychologist illuminates cognition

Amir Raz and Kim L. Norman
Page 673-674
-
Conscious will in the absence of ghosts, hypnotists, and other people

Johannes Schultz, Natalie Sebanz and Chris Frith
Page 674-675
-
Is the illusion of conscious will an illusion?

Robert J. Sternberg
Page 675-676
-
Wegners illusion anticipated: Jonathan Edwards on the will

Ryan D. Tweney and Amy B. Wachholtz
Page 676-676
-
Why conscious free will both is and isnt an illusion

Max Velmans
Page 677-677
-
The short- and long-term consequences of believing an illusion

Michael E. Young
Page 677-678
-
Conscious will and agent causation

G. E. Zuriff
Page 678-679
-
Frequently asked questions about conscious will

Daniel M. Wegner
Page 679-692
-
Aping Newtonian physics but ignoring brute facts will not transform Skinnerian psychology into genuine science or useful technology

John J Furedy
Page 693-694
-
Behavioral momentum in Pavlovian conditioning and the learning/performance distinction

Hernn I. Savastano and Ralph R. Miller
Page 694-695
-
Behavioral momentum and Pavlovian conditioning

Randolph C. Grace and John A. Nevin
Page 695-697
-
Learning theory, feed-forward mechanisms, and the adaptiveness of conditioned responding

Peter D. Balsam and Michael R. Drew
Page 698-698
-
Authors Response

Michael Domjan, Brian Cusato and Ronald Villarreal
Page 699-699
-
The local is running on the express track: Localist models better facilitate understanding of nervous system function

Paul A. Koch and Gerry Leisman
Page 700-700
-
Local versus distributed: A poor taxonomy of neural coding strategies

Michael W. Spratling
Page 700-702
-
Drug induced alterations in dreaming: An exploration of the dream data terrain outside activation-synthesis

Jim F. Pagel
Page 702-707
-
Is the concept of object still a suitable notion?

Marie-Dominique Giraudo and Andrew B. Slifkin
Page 707-708
-
There may not be an A-not-B error

Thomas A. Stoffregen
Page 708-709
-
Hidden operators of mental attention applying on LTM give the illusion of a separate working memory

Juan Pascual-Leone
Page 709-711
|
|