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Consciousness and Mental Life
Daniel N. Robinson
出版
Columbia University Press
, 2008
主題
Medical / Neuroscience
Philosophy / General
Philosophy / Free Will & Determinism
Philosophy / Mind & Body
Psychology / Cognitive Psychology & Cognition
Psychology / Cognitive Neuroscience & Cognitive Neuropsychology
Science / Philosophy & Social Aspects
Science / Life Sciences / Neuroscience
Science / Cognitive Science
ISBN
0231141009
9780231141000
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=OrWrAgAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
In recent decades, issues that reside at the center of philosophical and psychological inquiry have been absorbed into a scientific framework variously identified as "brain science," "cognitive science," and "cognitive neuroscience." Scholars have heralded this development as revolutionary, but a revolution implies an existing method has been overturned in favor of something new. What long-held theories have been abandoned or significantly modified in light of cognitive neuroscience?
Consciousness and Mental Life
questions our present approach to the study of consciousness and the way modern discoveries either mirror or contradict understandings reached in the centuries leading up to our own. Daniel N. Robinson does not wage an attack on the emerging discipline of cognitive science. Rather, he provides the necessary historical context to properly evaluate the relationship between issues of consciousness and neuroscience and their evolution over time.
Robinson begins with Aristotle and the ancient Greeks and continues through to René Descartes, David Hume, William James, Daniel Dennett, John Searle, Richard Rorty, Hilary Putnam, and Derek Parfit. Approaching the issue from both a philosophical and a psychological perspective, Robinson identifies what makes the study of consciousness so problematic and asks whether cognitive neuroscience can truly reveal the origins of mental events, emotions, and preference, or if these occurrences are better understood by studying the whole person, not just the brain. Well-reasoned and thoroughly argued,
Consciousness and Mental Life
corrects many claims made about the success of brain science and provides a valuable historical context for the study of human consciousness.