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Comments in P. Laslett

In Peter Laslett (ed.), The Physical Basis Of Mind. Ny: Macmillan (1950)

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  1. (3 other versions)The “Levels of Experience” Doctrine in Modern Philosophy of Mind.Paul Tibbetts - 1971 - Dialectica 25 (2):131-151.
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  • Mind–Body, Causation and Correlation.Cornelius L. Golightly - 1952 - Philosophy of Science 19 (3):225-227.
    Contemporary organismic and bio-social accounts of human behavior consider physical and psychological concepts as alternative or complementary linguistic descriptions of the same subject matter. The notion of complementarity is an important part of the organismic physicalistic synthesis which replaces the old duels between mechanism and vitalism, between physiology and psychology. The concept of complementarity comes from Bohr's solution for the difficulty of reconciling classical mechanics with quantum mechanics. He suggested that they are parallel and complementary rather than contradictory ways of (...)
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  • The Status of Brain in the Concept of Mind.Henry Cohen - 1952 - Philosophy 27 (102):195 - 210.
    It is with no feigned modesty that I acknowledge, as a limited and superficial student of philosophy, the honour you have done me by your invitation to deliver the Manson Lecture. But if the honour is undeserved, it is by fortuitous circumstance the more appreciated. Dr. Manson was a family doctor in Warrington, Lancs., with whom I was privileged to have close professional associations. He was a man of many parts who regarded the isolation of medicine from philosophy as an (...)
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  • Psycho-Physical Union: The Problem of the Person in Descartes.Murray Lewis Miles - 1983 - Dialogue 22 (1):23-46.
    The problem of the person may be described as the crux of Descartes' philosophy in the fairly obvious literal sense that it is the point of intersection of the two chief axes of the system, the Philosophy of Nature and the Philosophy of Mind. The actual, if not professed aim of the former is the ousting of the occult powers and faculties of Scholastic-Aristotelian physics by the mechanical concept of force or action-by-contact. The chief tenet of the latter is that (...)
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  • A critique of Revonsuo's theory of consciousness.John Smythies - 2009 - Philosophical Psychology 22 (1):99 – 106.
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