Dennett, Daniel C (1991) The Brain and its Boundaries. [Newspaper/Magazine Article]
Full text available as:
HTML
16Kb |
Abstract
These are heady times for the sciences of the mind. The pace of discovery is quickening, thanks to the mountain of data provided by the new brain-imaging technologies, but thanks even more to the computer simulations that have expanded and disciplined our imaginations, dramatically enlarging the logical space of models that can be investigated. We can now seriously consider hypotheses that a few years ago were simply unframable--"inconceivable", a philosopher might have been tempted to say. These computer-expanded powers are being vigorously exploited by a new generation of theorists and experimentalists. In some quarters the first symptoms of gold rush fever have been detected.
Item Type: | Newspaper/Magazine Article |
---|---|
Subjects: | Philosophy > Philosophy of Mind Philosophy > Philosophy of Science |
ID Code: | 262 |
Deposited By: | Dennett, Daniel |
Deposited On: | 05 Apr 1998 |
Last Modified: | 11 Mar 2011 08:53 |
Metadata
- ASCII Citation
- Atom
- BibTeX
- Dublin Core
- EP3 XML
- EPrints Application Profile (experimental)
- EndNote
- HTML Citation
- ID Plus Text Citation
- JSON
- METS
- MODS
- MPEG-21 DIDL
- OpenURL ContextObject
- OpenURL ContextObject in Span
- RDF+N-Triples
- RDF+N3
- RDF+XML
- Refer
- Reference Manager
- Search Data Dump
- Simple Metadata
- YAML
Repository Staff Only: item control page