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Introduction: Themes in Ned Block's Philosophy of Mind and Consciousness
1 Attention and Direct Realism
2 The Direct Realist Approach to Illusion: Reply to Bill Brewer
3 Psychological Content and Egocentric Indexes
4 Tyler Burge on Perceptual Adaptation
5 Attention Alters Appearance
6 Attention Affects Appearance: Response to Marisa Carrasco
7 Three Puzzles about Spatial Experience
8 David Chalmers on Shape and Color
9 Physicalism and the A Priori
10 Reply to Frank Jackson on A Priori Necessitation
11 The Emperor's New Phenomenology? The Empirical Case for Conscious Experiences without First-Order Representations
12 Empirical Science Meets Higher-Order Views of Consciousness: Reply to Hakwan Lau and Richard Brown
13 Alien Subjectivity and the Importance of Consciousness
14 Geoff Lee's Hegemony of the Third Person
15 Representational Exhaustion
16 Strong Representationism and Unconscious Perception: Reply to Janet Levin
17 On Phenomenal Access
18 Intuitions and the Metaphysics of Mind: Reply to Joe Levine
19 Block and the Representation Theory of Sensory Qualities
20 Puzzled about Sensory Qualities: Reply to Bill Lycan
21 Could an Android Be Sentient?
22 Functional Role, Superficialism, and Commander Data: Reply to Brian McLaughlin
23 How Can Brains in Vats Experience a Spatial World? A Puzzle for Internalists
24 Arguments Pro and Con on Adam Pautz's External Directedness Principle
25 "Naive Realism" and Qualia
26 Concepts and Percepts: Reply to Hilary Putnam
27 Phenomenal Character and Physicalism
28 Sydney Shoemaker on Transparency and the Inverted Spectrum
29 Attention and Perceptual Justification
30 Attention as a Conduit: Reply to Nicholas Silins and Susanna Siegel
31 In Praise of Poise
32 Poise, Dispositions, and Access Consciousness: Reply to Daniel Stoljar
33 Homunculi Heads and Silicon Chips: The Importance of History to Phenomenology
34 Fading Qualia: A Response to Michael Tye
35 Can Representationism Explain How Attention Affects Appearances?
36 Optimal Attention: Reply to Sebastian Watzl
Bibliography of Ned Block's Works
Contributors
Index

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Blockheads! : essays on Ned Block's philosophy of mind and consciousness 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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New essays on the philosophy of Ned Block, with substantive and wide-ranging responses by Block.

Perhaps more than any other philosopher of mind, Ned Block synthesizes philosophical and scientific approaches to the mind; he is unique in moving back and forth across this divide, doing so with creativity and intensity. Over the course of his career, Block has made groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of intelligence, representation, and consciousness. Blockheads! (the title refers to Block's imaginary counterexample to the Turing test—and to the Block-enthusiast contributors) offers eighteen new essays on Block's work along with substantive and wide-ranging replies by Block. The essays and responses not only address Block's past contributions but are rich with new ideas and argument. They importantly clarify many key elements of Block's work, including his pessimism concerning such thought experiments as Commander Data and the Nation of China; his more general pessimism about intuitions and introspection in the philosophy of mind; the empirical case for an antifunctionalist, biological theory of phenomenal consciousness; the fading qualia problem for a biological theory; the link between phenomenal consciousness and representation (especially spatial representation); and the reducibility of phenomenal representation. Many of the contributors to Blockheads! are prominent philosophers themselves, including Tyler Burge, David Chalmers, Frank Jackson, and Hilary Putnam.

Contributors
Ned Block, Bill Brewer, Richard Brown, Tyler Burge, Marisa Carrasco, David Chalmers, Frank Jackson, Hakwan Lau, Geoffrey Lee, Janet Levin, Joseph Levine, William G. Lycan, Brian P. McLaughlin, Adam Pautz, Hilary Putnam, Sydney Shoemaker, Susanna Siegel, Nicholas Silins, Daniel Stoljar, Michael Tye, Sebastian Watzl



About the Author

Adam Pautz is Professor of Philosophy at Brown University.

Daniel Stoljar is Professor of Philosophy at Australian National University.

Ned Block is Silver Professor of Philosophy and Psychology at New York University and was Chair of the Philosophy Program at MIT from 1990 to 1995. He is a coeditor of The Nature of Consciousness: Philosophical Debates (MIT Press, 1997).

Tyler Burge is Distinguished Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of California, Los Angeles.

William G. Lycan is Professor of Philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.

Hilary Putnam was Walter Beverly Pearson Professor of Mathematical Logic at Harvard University.

Michael Tye is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. He is the author of Ten Problems of Consciousness (1995), Consciousness, Color, and Content (2000), and Consciousness and Persons (2003), all published by the MIT Press.