Home > Philosophy > This Handbook
Subject: Philosophy  Book Title: The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Neuroscience
The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Neuroscience
Bickle, John (Editor), Professor of Philosophy and Professor of Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati
  More about the Editors

Print publication date: 2009 Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-530478-7
Published to Oxford Handbooks Online: September 2009
doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195304787.001.0001


This Book in Print
 
Abstract: Introduction – Molecules, Systems, and Behavior: Another View of Memory Consolidation – Biological Clocks: Explaining with Models of Mechanisms – Methodology and Reduction in the Behavioral Neurosciences: Object Exploration as a Case Study – The Science of Research and the Search for Molecular Mechanisms of Cognitive Functions – The Lower Bounds of Cognition: What Do Spinal Cords Reveal? – Lessons for Cognitive Science from Neurogenomics – Learning, Neuroscience, and the Return of Behaviorism – fMRI: A Modern Cerebrascope? The Case of Pain – The Embedded Neuron, the Enactive Field? – The Role of Neurobiology in Differentiating the Senses – Enactivism's Vision: Neurocognitive Basis or Neurocognitively Baseless? – Space, Time, and Objects – Neurocomputational Models: Theory, Application, Philosophical Consequences – Neuroanatomy and Cosmology – The Emerging Theory of Motivation – Inference to the Best Decision – Emergentism at the Crossroads of Philosophy, Neurotechnology, and the Enhancement Debate – What's “Neu” in Neuroethics? – Confabulations about People and Their Limbs, Present or Absent – Delusional Experience – The Case for Animal Emotions: Modeling Neuropsychiatric Disorders – Levels, Individual Variation, and Massive Multiple Realization in Neurobiology – Neuro-Eudaimonics or Buddhists Lead Neuroscientists to the Seat of Happiness – The Neurophilosophy of Subjectivity

Keywords: cognition, cognitive science, consequence, cosmology, emotion, experience, explanation, field, happiness, implication, individual, inference, mechanism, memory, model, motivation, neuroscience, perception, philosophy, sensation, space, subject, vision, learning, models, people, present, properties, realization, subjectivity
Introduction
Bickle, John
You have access to the abstract and full text for this item.      You have access to the full text for this item.
5. The Lower Bounds of Cognition: What Do Spinal Cords Reveal?
Allen, Colin
Grau, James W.
Meagher, Mary W.
8. fMRI: A Modern Cerebrascope? The Case of Pain
Gray Hardcastle, Valerie
Matthew Stewart, C.
9. The Embedded Neuron, the Enactive Field?
Chirimuuta, Mazviita
Gold, Ian
14. Neuroanatomy and Cosmology
Cherniak, Christopher
16. Inference to the Best Decision
Smith Churchland, Patricia
20. Delusional Experience
Mundale, Jennifer
Gallagher, Shaun
21. The Case for Animal Emotions: Modeling Neuropsychiatric Disorders
Sufka, Kenneth
Weldon, Morgan
Allen, Colin
Index
You have access to the full text for this item.


Related Content in OHO
Related Content from OUP

John Bickle is Professor at the University of Cincinnati, in the Department of Philosophy and the Neuroscience Graduate Program. His research interests include the philosophy of neuroscience, the nature of scientific reductionism, and cellular and molecular mechanisms of cognition and consciousness. He is the author of three books and more than 60 articles, book chapters, and encyclopedia entries, in journals ranging from Philosophy of Science and Philosophy and Phenomenological Research to Journal of Computational Neuroscience and Journal of Physiology (Paris).




 
John Bickle
doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195304787.001.0001



Quick Search Form

 
scroll up fast
scroll up
 
scroll down
scroll down fast
The Oxford Handbook ofPhilosophy and Neuroscience