Results for 'MEG'

48 found
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  1. Composition as Identity: Part 1.Meg Wallace - 2011 - Philosophy Compass 6 (11):804-816.
    Many of us think that ordinary objects – such as tables and chairs – exist. We also think that ordinary objects have parts: my chair has a seat and some legs as parts, for example. But once we are committed to the (seemingly innocuous) thesis that ordinary objects are composed of parts, we then open ourselves up to a whole host of philosophical problems, most of which center on what exactly the composition relation is. Composition as Identity (CI) is the (...)
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  2. Composition as Identity: Part 2.Meg Wallace - 2011 - Philosophy Compass 6 (11):817-827.
    Many of us think that ordinary objects – such as tables and chairs – exist. We also think that ordinary objects have parts: my chair has a seat and some legs as parts, for example. But once we are committed to the (seemingly innocuous) thesis that ordinary objects are composed of parts, we then open ourselves up to a whole host of philosophical problems, most of which center on what exactly this composition relation is. Composition as Identity (CI) is the (...)
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  3. (1 other version)Composition as Identity, Modal Parts, and Mereological Essentialism.Meg Wallace - 2014 - In Aaron J. Cotnoir & Donald L. M. Baxter, [no title]. Oxford: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 111-129.
    Some claim that Composition as Identity (CI) entails Mereological Essentialism (ME). If this is right, then we have an effective modus tollens against CI: ME is clearly false, so CI is, too. Rather than deny the conditional, I will argue that a CI theorist should embrace ME. I endorse a theory of modal parts such that ordinary objects are spatially, temporally, and modally extended. Accepting modal parts is certainly beneficial to CI theorists, but it also provides elegant solutions to the (...)
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  4. The Lump Sum: A Theory of Modal Parts.Meg Wallace - 2019 - Philosophical Papers 48 (3):403-435.
    A lump theorist claims that ordinary objects are spread out across possible worlds, much like many of us think that tables are spread out across space. We are not wholly located in any one particular world, the lump theorist claims, just as we are not wholly spatially located where one’s hand is. We are modally spread out, a trans-world mereological sum of world-bound parts. We are lump sums of modal parts. And so are all other ordinary objects. In this paper, (...)
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  5. Choose Your Own Essentia.Meg Wallace & Jason Bowers - forthcoming - Philosophy and Literature.
    None of us are immortal. We do not have an infinite time to live; we are not temporally endless. Yet we could have lived an infinite number of ways, rendering us modally endless. We argue that modal endlessness leads to a puzzle similar to one that Jorge Luis Borges raises in “The Immortal.” After explaining this puzzle, we walk through some responses that do not work, and present two revisionary responses that do. One of these solutions requires radically reassessing our (...)
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  6. Mental Fictionalism.Meg Wallace - 2022 - In Tamás Demeter, T. Parent & Adam Toon, Mental Fictionalism: Philosophical Explorations. New York & London: Routledge. pp. 27-51.
    There is uneasy tension between our ordinary talk about beliefs and desires and the ontological facts supported by neuroscience. Arguments for eliminative materialism are persuasive, yet error theory about folk psychological discourse seems unacceptable. One solution is to accept mental fictionalism: the view that we are (or should be) fictionalists about mentality. My aim in this paper is to explore mental fictionalism as a viable theoretical option, and to show that it has advantages over other fictionalist views in the literature, (...)
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  7. The polysemy of ‘part’.Meg Wallace - 2019 - Synthese 198 (Suppl 18):4331-4354.
    Some philosophers assume that our ordinary parts-whole concepts are intuitive and univocal. Moreover, some assume that mereology—the formal theory of parts-whole relations—adequately captures these intuitive and univocal notions. Lewis, for example, maintains that mereology is “perfectly understood, unproblematic, and certain.” Following his lead, many assume that expressions such as ‘is part of’ are univocal, topic-neutral, and that compositional monism is true. This paper explores the rejection of –. I argue that our ordinary parts-whole expressions are polysemous; they have multiple distinct, (...)
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  8. Counterexamples and Common Sense: When (Not) to Tollens a Ponens.Meg Wallace - 2020 - Analysis 80 (3):544-558.
    Most ordinary folks think that there are ordinary objects such as trees and frogs. They do not think there are extraordinary objects such as the mereological sum of trees and frogs, as the permissivist does. Nor do they deny the existence of ordinary composite objects such as tables, as the eliminativist does. In his recent book, Objects: Nothing Out of the Ordinary, Korman positions himself alongside ordinary folk. He deftly defends the common sense view of ordinary objects, and argues against (...)
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  9. Cops, Cameras and the Policing of Ethics.Meg Stalcup & Charles Hahn - 2016 - Theoretical Criminology 20 (4):482-501.
    In this article, we explore some of the roles of cameras in policing in the United States. We outline the trajectory of key new media technologies, arguing that cameras and social media together generate the ambient surveillance through which graphic violence is now routinely captured and circulated. Drawing on Michel Foucault, we suggest that there are important intersections between this video footage and police subjectivity, and propose to look at two: recruit training at the Washington state Basic Law Enforcement Academy (...)
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  10. Interpol and the Emergence of Global Policing.Meg Stalcup - 2013 - In William Garriott, Policing and Contemporary Governance: The Anthropology of Police in Practice. Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 231-261.
    This chapter examines global policing as it takes shape through the work of Interpol, the International Criminal Police Organization. Global policing emerges in the legal, political and technological amalgam through which transnational police cooperation is carried out, and includes the police practices inflected and made possible by this phenomenon. Interpol’s role is predominantly in the circulation of information, through which it enters into relationships and provides services that affect aspects of governance, from the local to national, regional and global. The (...)
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  11. Policing Uncertainty: On Suspicious Activity Reporting.Meg Stalcup - 2015 - In Rabinow Simimian-Darash, Modes of Uncertainty: Anthropological Cases. University of Chicago. pp. 69-87.
    A number of the men who would become the 9/11 hijackers were stopped for minor traffic violations. They were pulled over by police officers for speeding or caught by random inspection without a driver’s license. For United States government commissions and the press, these brushes with the law were missed opportunities. For some police officers though, they were of personal and professional significance. These officers replayed the incidents of contact with the 19 men, which lay bare the uncertainty of every (...)
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  12. Counterparts and Compositional Nihilism: A Reply to A. J. Cotnoir.Meg Wallace - 2013 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 2 (2):242-247.
    One of the primary burdens of the mereological nihilist is accounting for our ordinary intuitions about material objects. It certainly *seems* as if I am typing on a keyboard, which has particular keys and buttons as parts. But such intuitions are mistaken if mereological nihilism is right, leading to widespread error. So nihilists often propose paraphrases of our everyday utterances as compensation. Cotnoir aims to deliver a new paraphrase strategy on behalf of the nihilist: one that interprets parthood and composition (...)
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  13. Mental fictionalism: a foothold amid deflationary collapse.Meg Wallace - 2022 - In Tamás Demeter, T. Parent & Adam Toon, Mental Fictionalism: Philosophical Explorations. New York & London: Routledge. pp. 275-300.
    This paper examines three meta-ontological deflationary approaches – frameworks, verbal disputes, and metalinguistic negotiation – and applies them to ontological debates in philosophy of mind. An intriguing consequence of this application is that it reveals a deep, systematic problem for mental deflationism – specifically, a problem of cognitive collapse. This is surprising; cognitive collapse problems are usually reserved for serious ontological views such as eliminative materialism and mental fictionalism, not deflationism. This paper investigates why deflationism about the mental is particularly (...)
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  14.  53
    Philosophy through Spectacle.Meg Wallace - 2024 - In Brynn Welch, The art of teaching philosophy: reflective values and concrete practices. London: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 57-68.
    My course Circus and Philosophy is an explicit mix of theory and praxis. In roughly half of the class sessions, students learn physical circus skills such as juggling, aerial arts, and acro-balancing. In the other half, students learn introductory philosophical topics in ethics, aesthetics, social and political philosophy, metaphysics and epistemology. Combining circus with philosophy is an innovative way to get students to learn philosophy by moving, resulting in a truly embodied education. Yet there are a number of significant challenges (...)
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  15. The Aesthetic Politics of Unfinished Media: New Media Activism in Brazil.Meg Stalcup - 2016 - Visual Anthropology Review 32 (2):144-156.
    This article analyzes the role of key visual technologies in contemporary media activism in Brazil. Drawing on a range of media formats and sources, it examines how the aesthetic politics of activists in protests that took place in 2013 opened the way for wider sociopolitical change. The forms and practices of the media activists, it is argued, aimed explicitly at producing transformative politics. New media technologies were remediated as a kind of equipment that could generate new relationships and subjectivities, and (...)
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  16. Anthropology of Security and Security in Anthropology: Cases of Counterterrorism in the United States.Meg Stalcup & Limor Samimian-Darash - 2017 - Anthropological Theory 1 (17):60-87.
    In our study of U.S. counterterrorism programs, we found that anthropology needs a mode of analysis that considers security as a form distinct from insecurity, in order to capture the very heterogeneity of security objects, logics and forms of action. This article first presents a genealogy for the anthropology of security, and identifies four main approaches: violence and State terror; military, militarization, and militarism; para-state securitization; and what we submit as “security analytics.” Security analytics moves away from studying security formations, (...)
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  17. Internet Techniques for an Untimely Anthropology.Meg Stalcup - 2020 - In Julie Laplante, Willow Scobie & Ari Gandsman, Searching After Method: Live Anthropology. Berghahn Book. pp. 102-107.
    Making “the familiar strange and the strange familiar” is what anthropology has long claimed as its expertise. The Internet and its broader technological problem space pose methodological challenges, however, for a discipline that has traditionally drawn on the authority of “being there” to ground its claims to knowledge.
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  18. Global Health and the Demands of the Day.Meg Stalcup & Stéphane Verguet - 2011 - Health, Culture and Society 1 (1):28-44.
    We have two goals in this paper: first, to provide a diagnosis of global health and underline some of its blockages; second, to offer an alternative interpretation of what the demands for those in global health may be. The assumption that health is a good that requires no further explanation, and that per se it can serve as an actual modus operandi, lays the foundations of the problem. Related blockages ensue and are described using HIV prevention with a focus on (...)
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  19. Mothers and Children: Designing research toward integrated care for both.Meg Stalcup & Stéphane Verguet - 2012 - Health, Culture and Society 3 (1):160-171.
    The Millennium Development Goals (MDG) set time-bound targets that are powerful shapers of how and for whom health is pursued. In this paper we examine some ramifications of both the temporal limitation, and maternal-child health targeting of MDG 4 and 5. The 2015 end date may encourage increasing the number of mass campaigns to meet the specific MDG objectives, potentially to the detriment of a more comprehensive approach to health. We discuss some ethical, political, and pragmatic ramifications of this tendency, (...)
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  20. Rearming the Slingshot?Meg Wallace - 2015 - Acta Analytica 30 (3):283-292.
    Slingshot arguments aim to show that an allegedly non-extensional sentential connective—such as “necessarily ” or “the statement that Φ corresponds to the fact that ”—is, to the contrary, an extensional sentential connective. Stephen Neale : 761-825, 1995, 2001) argues that a reformulation of Gödel’s slingshot puts pressure on us to adopt a particular view of definite descriptions. I formulate a revised version of the slingshot argument—one that relies on Kaplan’s notion of “dthat.” I aim to show that if Neale’s version (...)
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  21. A estética política do ativismo através de novas mídias.Meg Stalcup - 2016 - In Marinyze Prates de Oliveira & Jonathan Warren, Miradas sobre o Brasil: cultura, arte e poder. Editora da Universidade Federal da Bahia. pp. 13-33.
    Neste capítulo, analisa-se a documentação visual dos protestos de 2013, contrastando a cobertura da grande mídia em São Paulo e Rio de Janeiro com a de ativistas usando as tecnologias de nova mídia. Os temas centrais são a forma como o exercício do poder político é mediado através de novas tecnologias de mídia e a racionalidade política que anima os ativistas. Dito de outro modo, pergunta-se: por que os atores criaram imagens da forma que o fizeram e que objetivos políticos (...)
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  22. What If? Re-imagined Scenarios and the Re-virtualisation of History.Meg Stalcup - 2015 - Media/Culture Journal 18 (6).
    This article explores the process of “re-imagined scenarios,” through which the moments of contact with the 9/11 hijackers were developed into scenarios that came to play a central role in U.S. counterterrorism training and policy. Drawing on fieldwork and interviews with trainers, government officials, and police officers, it is argued that these scenarios do not recreate previous encounters, or conjure up possible futures, but instead rely on “the elasticity of the almost” to reactivate the past. The re-imagined scenarios call forth (...)
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  23. Lab Notes: Write-up of an experiment in collaborative anthropology.Meg Stalcup - 2011 - In Paul Rabinow, The Accompaniment: Assembling the Contemporary. University of Chicago. pp. 132-139.
    What are the actual practices of intellectual co-laboring? In the spring of 2006, we began an experiment in collaborative anthropology. There was a dual impetus to our efforts: a desire to deal head-on with inadequacies in our academic environment; and a strong feeling that the classic norms of qualitative inquiry needed to become contemporary. Collaboration struck us as potentially key to both. We drew a parallel to laboratory experiments. In the textbook version, one begins with a question, formulates a hypothesis, (...)
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  24. Patrimônio etnobotânico no Brasil: a feira livre.Meg Stalcup - 2013 - Revista Cadernos Do CEOM 26 (38):131-153.
    O trabalho analisa o patrimônio etnobotânico da feira livre, com base em um estudo feito no bairro da Tijuca, na cidade do Rio de Janeiro. Durante dois anos de trabalho de campo com quatro ervatários, que tinham média de 15 anos de experiência, foram coletados plantas e dados sobre nomes vulgares, usos e o preparo dos remédios. A coleta resultou em 151 espécies distribuídas em 59 famílias, de procedência diversa: comprada de terceiros, cultivada nos jardins particulares dos vendedores, ruderal, e (...)
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  25. Mediated Experiences: 1-7.Meg Stalcup, Bradley Dunseith, Sean Miller & Antoine Przybylak-Brouillard - 2016 - Somatosphere 2016.
    We take this book forum as an opportunity to reflect on Science, Reason, Modernity: Readings for an Anthropology of the Contemporary through our experiences, exploring how these texts served as our tools, and to what end. We discuss a research methods seminar in which we traced one possible variation on the “genealogical line” and “pedagogical legacy” (p. 33) to which this reader is extended as an invitation. The spirit of that invitation is, in our understanding, not to a canon that (...)
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  26. Review of Nicolas Langlitz's Neuropsychedelia: The Revival of Hallucinogen Research Since the Decade of the Brain. [REVIEW]Meg Stalcup - 2015 - Somatosphere 2015.
    Humphry Osmond wrote to Aldous Huxley in 1956 proposing the term “psychedelic,” coined from two Greek words to mean “mind manifesting.” The scholars, one a psychiatrist and the other a celebrated novelist and philosopher, were exuberant about the potential of drugs for accessing the mind. Huxley favored a phrase from William Blake: -/- If the doors of perception were cleansed everything would appear to man as it is, infinite. -/- He postulated that psychedelics disturbed the “cerebral reducing valve” (1954), and (...)
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  27. Spiritual Biologicals. [REVIEW]Meg Stalcup - 2013 - Biosocieties 8 (2):234–238.
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  28. Plantas de uso medicinal ou ritual numa feira livre no Rio de Janeiro, Brasil.Mary Margaret Stalcup & Meg Stalcup - 2000 - Dissertation, Universidade Federal Do Rio de Janeiro
    Este trabalho procura documentar as espécies e os usos de plantas vendidas por ervatários numa feira semanal do bairro da Tijuca na cidade do Rio de Janeiro. Foi realizado entre os meses de agosto/98 e agosto/99, e participaram da pesquisa quatro vendedores, com média de 15 anos de experiência no mercado, fornecendo as plantas e informações sobre seus nomes vulgares, usos e o preparo dos remédios. A feira foi visitada regularmente e os espécimes encontrados foram coletados, fotografados, herborizados e identificados (...)
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  29. Climate-induced redistribution of people is not inevitable.Ingrid Boas, Simona Capisani, Harald Sterly, Carol Farbotko, Mike Hulme, Hélène Benveniste, Kerilyn D. Schewel, Giovanni Bettini, Marion Borderon, Roman Hoffmann, Kees van der Geest, David Durand-Delacre, Jan Selby, David J. Wrathall, Andrew Baldwin, Ailín Benítez Cortés, Kaderi N. Bukari, Simon Bunchuay-Peth, Samuel Nii Ardey Codjoe, Ruben Dahm, Camelia Dewan, Huub Dijstelbloem, Sonja Fransen, François Gemenne, Michele Dalla Fontana, Dorothea Hilhorst, Monica V. Iyer, Maggi W. H. Leung, Bishawjit Mallick, Kasia Paprocki, Meg Parsons, Patrick Sakdapolrak, Alex de Sherbinin, Farhana Sultana, Tearinaki P. P. Tanielu, Merewalesi Yee & Caroline Zickgraf - forthcoming - Environmental Research.
    As climate change intensifies, scientific and policy discussions increasingly address questions of future habitability and potential population movements. In this perspective, we caution against premature or top-down characterizations of areas as uninhabitable, or portrayals of large-scale climate-induced displacement as inevitable—particularly when the perspectives and preferences of affected populations are excluded. While we recognize the importance of modelling and scenario-building to assess future risks, we argue that such efforts must be grounded in local realities and include diverse forms of knowledge. Habitability (...)
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  30. Electrophysiological connectivity of logical deduction: Early cortical MEG study.Anton Toro Luis F., Salto Francisco, Requena Carmen & Maestu Fernando - 2023 - Cortex 166:365-376.
    Complex human reasoning involves minimal abilities to extract conclusions implied in the available information. These abilities are considered “deductive” because they exemplify certain abstract relations among propositions or probabilities called deductive arguments. However, the electrophysiological dynamics which supports such complex cognitive pro- cesses has not been addressed yet. In this work we consider typically deductive logico- probabilistically valid inferences and aim to verify or refute their electrophysiological functional connectivity differences from invalid inferences with the same content (same relational variables, same (...)
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  31. Új szülők, új gyermekek: Miképpen változtatja meg szülői felelősségünket a reprodukciós medicina.Gusztáv Kovács - 2014 - PPHF.
    The book discusses the development of reproductive medicine from the perspective of the parent-child relationship. -/- A könyv a reprodukciós medicina fejlődését vizsgálja a szülői felelősség szempontjából.
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  32. Subliminal enhancement of predictive effects during syntactic processing in the left inferior frontal gyrus: an MEG study.Kazuki Iijima & Kuniyoshi L. Sakai - 2014 - Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience 8 (217):01-14.
    Predictive syntactic processing plays an essential role in language comprehension. In our previous study using Japanese object-verb (OV) sentences, we showed that the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) responses to a verb increased at 120–140 ms after the verb onset, indicating predictive effects caused by a preceding object. To further elucidate the automaticity of the predictive effects in the present magnetoencephalography study, we examined whether a subliminally presented verb (“subliminal verb”) enhanced the predictive effects on the sentence-final verb (“target verb”) (...)
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  33. "...Lehetetlen úgy megváltoztatni a jelent, hogy ne változtassuk meg a múltat" - Losoncz Alpárral Tóth Szilárd János és Kocsis Árpád beszélget.Szilárd János Tóth, Árpád Kocsis & Alpár Losoncz - 2019 - Híd 86 (10):5-19.
    Interjú az Új Symposion örökségéről, Jugoszláviáról, a vajdasági magyarság baloldali radikális hagyományáról, az avantgárdról stb.
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  34. Brain electrical traits of logical validity.F. Salto - 2021 - Scientific Reports 11 (7892).
    Neuroscience has studied deductive reasoning over the last 20 years under the assumption that deductive inferences are not only de jure but also de facto distinct from other forms of inference. The objective of this research is to verify if logically valid deductions leave any cerebral electrical trait that is distinct from the trait left by non-valid deductions. 23 subjects with an average age of 20.35 years were registered with MEG and placed into a two conditions paradigm (100 trials for (...)
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  35.  44
    The Thermodynamics of the Self: A Proof of Concept Based on Real Data Preliminary Empirical Evidence of Entropic Rigidity and Neural Disintegration.Felipe G. Romero - 2026 - Zenodo 1.
    This technical report presents a proof of concept for the "Self as a Dissipative Structure" model. Using Magnetoencephalography (MEG) data, we mapped brain dynamics across two axes: Lempel-Ziv Complexity (LZc) and Global Phase Synchrony. While this pilot study utilizes a limited sample (N=1 per group), the results demonstrate robust distinctions between Major Depression (Q2), characterized by entropic rigidity (LZc ≈ 0.05), and high-complexity states. The inclusion of phase synchrony allowed for the differentiation of functional health from psychotic disintegration, suggesting that (...)
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  36. There is no haecceitic Euthyphro problem.Alexander Skiles - 2019 - Analysis 79 (3):477-484.
    Jason Bowers and Meg Wallace have recently argued that those who hold that every individual instantiates a ‘haecceity’ are caught up in a Euthyphro-style dilemma when confronted with familiar cases of fission and fusion. Key to Bowers and Wallace’s dilemma are certain assumptions about the nature of metaphysical explanation and the explanatory commitments of belief in haecceities. However, I argue that the dilemma only arises due to a failure to distinguish between providing a metaphysical explanation of why a fact holds (...)
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  37. The Consciousness Identity Factor: A Physical Postulate for Subjective Continuity and Uniqueness.K. L. Senarath Dayathilake - forthcoming - Cambridge University Press, Engage Core ( Pending).
    This theoretical synthesis presents a unified model of consciousness that reconciles the persistent unity of subjective experience with the constant physical flux of the brain. It integrates two previously proposed frameworks—(1) the high probability of an afterlife and (2) the continuity and uniqueness of consciousness—into a single, testable biophysical theory. The core of this model is the Two-Particle Quantum Bonding Hypothesis (TPQBH), which posits that the stream of consciousness is mediated by two non-energetic, ultra-quantum particles: the Universal- ultra Quantum Genomic (...)
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  38. Objects: Nothing out of the Ordinary (Book Symposium Précis).Daniel Z. Korman - 2020 - Analysis 80 (3):511-513.
    Précis for a book symposium, with contributions from Meg Wallace, Louis deRosset, and Chris Tillman and Joshua Spencer.
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  39. The perception of phantom Limbs: The D. O. Hebb lecture.Vilayanur S. Ramachandran & William Hirstein - 1998 - Brain 121:1603-1630.
    Almost everyone who has a limb amputated will experience a phantom limb--the vivid impression that the limb is not only still present, but in some cases, painful. There is now a wealth of empirical evidence demonstrating changes in cortical topography in primates following deafferentation or amputation, and this review will attempt to relate these in a systematic way to the clinical phenomenology of phantom limbs. With the advent of non-invasive imaging techniques such as MEG (magnetoencephalogram) and functional MRI, topographical reorganization (...)
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  40. Consciousness as Frequency Dynamics: A Unified Theory of Mind, Life, and Autism.Gideon Jacobus Joubert - manuscript
    We unify consciousness studies, philosophy of life, and evolutionary cognitive science through frequency dynamics grounded in measurable neural oscillations. The framework generates three interconnected hypotheses: (1) Consciousness emerges from reception-emission dynamics (c = f(a + e)) operating on neural oscillatory substrates (0.5-100 Hz, measurable via EEG/MEG). (2) Life trajectories solve underdetermined equations with deterministic, choice-based, and stochastic variables—reconciling free will with determinism and explaining meaning without teleological metaphysics. (3) Autism represents evolutionary retuning: amplified frequency reception optimized for information-dense environments. This (...)
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  41. Mental Phrase Markers in Sentence Processing.David Pereplyotchik - 2017 - In Psychosyntax: The Nature of Grammar and its Place in the Mind. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 85-123.
    I marshal several lines of empirical support for the claim that the human sentence processing mechanism (HSPM) constructs representations of the syntactic structures of linguistic stimuli—what I call “mental phrase markers” (MPMs). Powerful neurocognitive evidence for this hypothesis is drawn from recent EEG and MEG studies. Further support comes from studies of structural priming and garden-path processing, which provide insight into the structure of MPMs. Structural priming involves modulating the speed of behavioral responses by exciting certain MPMs prior to a (...)
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  42. Anti-Phase Theta-Gamma Coupling: A Neurodynamic Hypothesis Derived from a Dynamic Self-Model (Accepted by CNS 2026).Wenge Huang - manuscript
    The nature of the self remains a central enigma in philosophy and a key frontier in science. This paper proposes a novel “Dynamic Self-Model”—the “minimal self” emerges from the rapid alternation between first-order “awareness” (A) and second-order “awareness-of-awareness” (AoA)—inspired by phenomenological insights from Buddhist meditation. -/- As a core component, we define AoA—typically not accessible to ordinary introspection—as a spontaneous, non-inferential “knowing” state distinct from effortful “meta-cognition” and attentional “meta-awareness”, thereby advancing it as a prime candidate for the Higher-Order Representation. (...)
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  43. En språklig verden. Noen tanker om språk og erkjennelse.Rani Lill Anjum - 2006 - In Sissel Redse Jørgensen & Rani Lill Anjum, Tegn som Språk. Gyldendal Akademisk.
    Språket vårt utgjør en stor del av vår identitet. Det er et redskap for kommunikasjon med andre mennesker, men også med oss selv. Vi uttrykker oss gjennom språket, og vi tenker ved hjelp av språket. Men hva er egentlig språk? Gjennom å ta for meg to vesensforskjellige tilnærminger til dette spørsmålet ønsker jeg å vise at det synet vi har på språk, har stor filosofiske betydning. Dette er fordi et språksyn nødvendigvis vil få konsekvenser for hvordan vi tenker om beslektede (...)
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  44. Concept Note: Signal-Bifurcation Theory (SBT).Letchford Nicholas James - manuscript
    Consciousness is neither a ubiquitous property of matter nor merely an emergent property of neural complexity. Signal-Bifurcation Theory (SBT) argues instead that it is the inner coherence of reality’s lawful unfolding: a codified generative process that patterns and scales with organisation — the Semepoeitic Signal — which becomes self-narrating only where symbolic recursion stabilises. Human selfhood is a bifurcation of this intrinsic process. Through language and culture, symbolic recursion folds back into itself, crystallising narratorship: closed loops of meta-recursion that mistake (...)
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  45. Structural Block Theory: A Recursive Model of Consciousness.Robert Singleton - manuscript
    Structural Block Theory (SBT) posits that consciousness is generated by experience blocks whose recursive resonance forms a self-stack. The stack’s integrity governs continuity of identity and the intensity/character of qualia. Evolutionary recursive selection pressure prunes architectures toward stack stability. Qualia are formalized as resonance events produced when a new block harmonizes with prior stack geometry. We define block fit, stack integrity, echo persistence, and resonance depth with metrics implementable via MEG/EEG/fMRI (cross-scale phase synchrony, recurrence analysis, microstate dynamics). SBT predicts recurrent (...)
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  46.  76
    Einstein: “Electric And Magnetic Fields Do Not Exist Independently Of The State Of Motion Of The System Of Coordinates”: Its Importance To Neuroscience And The Mind (1905).Douglas M. Snyder - manuscript
    The full understanding of Einstein's statement is that electric and magnetic fields have a non-material aspect since we see systems of coordinates having different electric and magnetic fields depending on their status as either the stationary or instead the moving frame. Underlying the importance of these non-material systems of coordinates is the logic and reason at the heart of the relativity of simultaneity in special relativity that depends on the observer at rest in the stationary frame deducing that his specific (...)
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  47.  45
    Eleven Identical Brains Reveal a Non-Copyable Component of Conscious Identity.Senarath Dayathilake K. L. - forthcoming - Cambridge.Org.
    The persistence of unique conscious identity despite complete neural material turnover has no explanation in current neuroscience or physics. Here I present three thought experiments—perfect revival, perfect copy, and simultaneous multiplication of identical brains—that reveal an inescapable trilemma for any framework identifying consciousness solely with brain structure or information processing. When multiple physically identical brains exist simultaneously, the original consciousness must either occupy all (contradicting the unity of experience), occupy none (making every person replaceable by perfect simulations), or occupy exactly (...)
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  48. Vietnam az óriások sakktábláján.Háda Béla - manuscript
    Nincs még egy délkelet-ázsiai ország, mely oly markáns hatást gyakorolt volna a huszadik század történelméről kialakult képükre, mint az egyesítésének 40. évfordulóját idén ünneplő Vietnami Szocialista Köztársaság. Ezt persze több évtizedes háborús szenvedéseinek és az amerikai tömegkultúra ezt nemritkán sajátosan közvetítő, de mindenképpen globális kisugárzással bíró üzeneteinek „köszönheti”.1 Vietnam viharos történelmi közelmúltja máig rányomja bélyegét a vele kapcsolatos képünkre, jóllehet, az említett 1975. évi – az északi és déli országrész egyesülésével járó – újjászületés óta itt sem állt meg az idő. (...)
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