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Mind, matter, and death: Cognitive neuroscience and the problem of survival. |
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Por Administrator
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10 de setembro de 2004 |
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Stokes, D. (1993). Mind, matter, and death: Cognitive neuroscience and the problem of survival. Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research, 87, (pp. 41-84).
Abstract
The implications of recent developments in cognitive neuro science for the survival problem are examined. The following three questions are addressed: (a) Is the conscious mind identical with or something other than the material structures and processes in the brain? (b) If the mind can be considered to be separate from the brain, can the location and nature of the interaction between mind and brain be pinned down? (c) Could the mind or a portion there of survive the death and dissolution of the brain? The mind-brain problem is discussed, with specific focus on the implications of connectionist, or computer neural net, models for the resolution of that problem. The specific interactionist models of Thouless and Wiesner, Eccles, Penfield, and others are examined, with particular attention paid to the implications of split-brain research and "modu lar" models of the mind for a theory of interactionism. Finally, the question of which aspects of the mind might survive death is addressed.
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