Description |
1 online resource (295 pages) |
Physical Medium |
polychrome |
Description |
text file |
Contents |
Intro; Table of contents; Preface; A priori explanation; 1. Framing the issue: preliminary consid; 2. A priori explanation, proof, and theo; 3. A priori elements in empirical explan; 4. Explanation and understanding; 5. Explanation of normative propositions; 6. Explanatory ultimacy and the groundin; 7. Conclusion; Bibliography; Brave new world: on nature, culture, and the limits of reductionism; 1. The real real world; 2. The human factor; 3. The limits of reductionism; On some problems of explanation in CogSc; Bibliography |
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Why science could never show that our intentions do not cause our brain events1. Ontology; 2. Epistemology; 3.; Why science could never show that our intentions do not cause our brain events; 1. The two cultures: differences in mode; 2. The two cultures: different stories about people's bounded rationality and how to improve it; Bibliography; Animal cognition: explaining cognitive evolution by way of experimental psychology-at all possible?; 1. Introduction; 2. A call for being critical; 3. Context, context, context; 4. Developmental complexities; 5. Another stab at experimental psychology |
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6. Summary and concluding remarksBibliography; Folk psychology and explanation; 1. What is folk psychology?; 2. Universal or culture-dependent?; 3. What is explanation?; 4. The two faces of explanation; 5. Back to folk psychology; Bibliography; Using conceptual spaces to explain how word meanings are learned; 1. The enigma of learning word meanings; 2. Conceptual spaces as a modelling tool; 3. Partitionings and prototypes; 4. Learning in conceptual spaces; 5. Learning words in a domain; 6. The establishment hypothesis; 7. The single domain hypothesis; 8. Conclusion; Acknowledgements |
Bibliography |
BibliographyA multitude of mental time representations: challenges and possibilities for explanation modelling; Introduction; 1. Modelling of an explanation and time; 2. Explanation and causation; 3. Causation and time; 4. Conventional time concept and the multitude of time representations; 5. The multitude of time representations and explanation; 6. Conclusion; Bibliography; Explaining hallucinations computationally; 1. Seeing What Is Not There: Charles Bonnet Syndrome; 2. Computational modeling of hallucination; 3. Computational mechanisms, representat and hallucinations; 4. Conclusion. |
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BibliographyRessentiment as a source of normative convictions; 1. The notion of ressentiment-initial intuitions; 2. Ressentiment in the thought of Friedrich Nietzsche and Max Scheler; 3. Normative convictions; 4. Ressentiment as a cause of excessive norms; 5. Ressentiment as a cause of the escape from freedom; 6. An apposition; Are moral intuitions merely affective heuristics; 1. What are heuristics?; 2. Why think moral intuitions are mere heuristics; 3. Why think the heuristics hypothesis is not sufficiently supported; 4. Conclusion; Bibliography. |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Philosophy of mind.
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Philosophy of mind. |
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Neurosciences -- Philosophy.
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Neurosciences -- Philosophy. |
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Psychology -- Philosophy.
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Psychology -- Philosophy. |
Genre/Form |
Electronic books.
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Added Author |
Kwiatek, Lukasz, editor.
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Stelmach, Jerzy, editor.
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Brożek, Bartosz.
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Other Form: |
Print version: Brozek, Bartosz. Explaining the Mind. Portland : Copernicus Center Press, ©2019 9788378863519 |
ISBN |
8378864707 |
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9788378864707 (electronic book) |
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8378863514 |
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9788378863519 |
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