The Mind (Oxford Readers)

The Mind (Oxford Readers)

by Daniel Robinson (Editor)

Synopsis

At the end of the twentieth century, it might seem that questions about the nature of the mind are best left to scientists - psychologists, neurophysiologists, and even computer programmers. Modern technology has provided not only artificial versions of what seems to be highly developed 'intelligence', but also high-fidelity imaging techniques for visualizing the human brain in action. How could the views of Aristotle or Descartes or Kant possibly contribute anything to debates about these issues, when the relevant neurophysiological facts and principles were completely unknown to them? As this Oxford Reader shows, the arguments of philosophers throughout history still provide essential insights into contemporary questions about the mind, and help to clarify the underlying scientific assumptions. Contributions from thinkers ranging from Plato and Locke to Roger Penrose and Oliver Sacks show that appreciating the full complexity of debates about consciousness, intelligence, and perception demands attention to fundamental questions which have occupied philosophers for over two thousand years.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 398
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Published: 01 Oct 1998

ISBN 10: 0192893084
ISBN 13: 9780192893086

Author Bio

Daniel Robinson is Distinguished Research Professor at Georgetown University, Washington, and regularly lectures at the University of Oxford. His publications include An Intellectual History of Psychology (1995), The Philosophy of Psychology (1985), and Wild Beasts and Idle Humours: Legal Insanity from Antiquity to the Present (1996).