Journal of Consciousness Studies
Contents and Selected Abstracts

Volume 4, Issue 3, 1997

Refereed Papers

  • Mutual enlightenment: recent phenomenology in cognitive science
    Shaun Gallagher Abstract
  • Are plants conscious?
    Alexandra Nagel Abstract
  • On the mechanisms of consciousness
    Rodney Cotterill Abstract
  • Panexperientialist physicalism and the mind-body problem
    David Ray Griffin Abstract
  • Obituary

    Willis Harman, by Jane Clark

    Book Reviews

  • Brian Josephson on Roger Penrose, The large, the small and the human mind
  • Roger Bissell on Fred Dretske, Naturalizing the mind
  • Andrew Bailey on Rocco Gennaro, Mind and brain: a dialogue on the mind-body problem
  • Adriano Palma on Valerie Gray Hardcastle, Locating consciousness
  • Alwyn Scott on Rodolfo Llinás and Patricia Churchland, The mind-brain continuum: sensory processes
  • Adriano Palma on William Lyons, Approaches to intentionality
  • Chris Nunn on Earl Maccormac and Maxim Stamenov (ed.), Fractals of brain, fractals of mind: in search of a symmetry bond
  • John Dance on Mary Midgley, Utopias, dolphins and computers: problems of philosophical plumbing
  • Anthony Campbell on Steven Mithen, The prehistory of the mind: a search for the origins of art, religion and science
  • Paul Johnston on Richard Powers, Galatea 2.2
  • Chris Nunn on R. Bennett, Towards a theory of the brain, consciousness and the mind
  • Dimiter Chakalov on Dejan Rakovic and Djuro Koruga (ed.), Consciousness: scientific challenge of the 21st century

  • Abstracts of Selected Articles

    Mutual enlightenment: recent phenomenology in cognitive science

    JCS, 4 (3), 1997, pp.195-214

    Shaun Gallagher, Department of Philosophy, Canisius College, Buffalo, NY 14208, USA
    gallaghr@canisius.edu

    This article provides a critical review of recent work at the intersection of phenomenology and cognitive science. What is and what ought to be the relationship between these two approaches to the study of consciousness? This review explores problems involved with expressing subjective experience in an objective fashion, and issues involved in the use of principles of isomorphism to explain how brain and consciousness are interrelated. It suggests that strict lines cannot be drawn between third-person theory and phenomenological description, that the division of labour between phenomenology and cognitive science is not very strict, and that the best model for understanding the relation between these two approaches is one that emphasizes an externalist viewpoint.


    Are plants conscious?

    JCS, 4 (3), 1997, pp.215-230

    Alexandra Nagel, Department of Theoretical Production-ecology, Wageningen Agricultural University, PO Box 430, 6700 AK Wageningen, The Netherlands

    Views of `plant consciousness' in the literature are classified on a scale ranging from descriptions of plant phenomena using consciousness as a metaphor, to explicit statements that plants are conscious beings. The idea of plant consciousness is far from new, but it has received a new impetus from recent claims by psychics to communicate with plants. The literature surveyed is widely scattered and very diverse, but it can teach us much about the views that various segments of society hold on plant consciousness.


    On the mechanism of consciousness

    JCS, 4 (3), 1997,pp.231-247

    Rodney M.J. Cotterill, Biophysics Group, Building 307, Danish Technical University, DK2800 Lyngby, Denmark
    firodcot@gbar.dtu.dk

    The master-module theory of consciousness (Cotterill, 1995; 1996) is considered in the light of experimental evidence that has emerged since the model was first published. It is found that these new results tend to strengthen the original hypothesis. It is also argued that the master module is involved in generation of the schemata previously postulated to be associated with consciousness (Bartlett, 1932). The recent discovery of attention-related activity in the thalamic intralaminar nuclei is taken to indicate that these structures constitute an important part of the feedback loop which the theory conjectured to mediate thought. The theory is shown to lead to a remarkably simple rationalization of the cerebral cortex, and it offers explanations of attention, binocular rivalry and qualia. It also makes the surprising prediction that Broca's area might not exclusively serve speech.


    Panexperientialist physicalism and the mind-body problem

    JCS, 4 (3), 1997, pp.248-268

    David Ray Griffin, Claremont School of Theology and Claremont Graduate School, Claremont, CA 91711, USA

    The intractable (not merely hard) mind-body problem, which involves accounting for freedom as well as conscious experience, is created by the assumption that the brain is comprised of insentient things. Chalmers is right, accordingly, to suggest that we take experience as fundamental. Given this starting-point, the hard problem is twofold: to see sufficient reason to adopt this long-despised approach, and to develop a plausible theory based on it. We have several reasons, I suggest, to reject the notion of `vacuous actuality' and to adopt, instead, the view that all true individuals have experience and spontaneity. After suggesting criteria for an acceptable theory, chief among which are `hard-core common-sense notions', I point out why dualism and materialism have been unable to fulfil these criteria. The strength of dualism has been its organizational duality, the strength of materialism its rejection of ontological dualism. I suggest that panexperientialist physicalism, by allowing for `compound individuals' and thereby a `nondualistic interactionism' that combines these strengths, can provide a theory that overcomes the problems of materialist physicalism.



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