Volume 6 (2000)

 

Book Reviews

The Enchanting Subject Of Consciousness (Or Is It A Black Hole?) Review of Enchanted Looms: Conscious Networks In Brains and Computers By Rodney Cotterill
John G. Taylor
Davies’s Continuum Theory: Does It Capture Experience? Review of Experience and Content: Consequences of a Continuum Theory By W. Martin Davies
Dennis Lomas
When Good Observers Go Bad:Change Blindness, Inattentional Blindness, and Visual Experience
Ronald A. Rensink
A Review of Jose Luis Bermudez’s The Paradox of Self-Consciousness.
Tim Kenyon

 

Articles

A Defense of First-Order Representationalist Theories of Mental-State Consciousness
Robert W. Lurz
Replies to Critics: Explaining Subjectivity
Peter Carruthers
How to Solve the Hard Problem: A Predictable Inexplicability
David Brooks
General Organizational Principles of the Brain as Key to the Study of Animal Consciousness
Ruud van den Bos
Clarifying the Triangular Circuit Theory of Attention and its Relations to Awareness Replies to Seven Commentaries
David LaBerge
Dreaming and Consciousness:Testing the Threat Simulation Theory of the Function of Dreaming  
Antti Revonsuo, Katja Valli
A Review Essay on Antonio Damasio’s The Feeling of What Happens: Body and Emotion in the Making of Consciousness 
Aldo Mosca
Change Detection: Paying Attention To Detail 
Erin Austen, James T. Enns
Precis of The Significance of Consciousness
Charles Siewert
Sustained Inattentional Blindness: The Role of Location in the Detection of Unexpected Dynamic Events 
Steven B. Most, Daniel J. Simons, Brian J. Scholl, Christopher F. Chabris
Perception, Attention and the Grand Illusion
Alva Noë, J.Kevin O’Regan
Neuropsychological Analogies Of Inattentional Blindness
Glyn W. Humphreys
On Processing in the Inattention Paradigm as Automatic
Joseph Tzelgov