Why the Mind is Not a Computer: A Pocket Lexicon of Neuromythology

Author:   Raymond Tallis
Publisher:   Imprint Academic
ISBN:  

9780907845942


Pages:   96
Publication Date:   04 November 2004
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Why the Mind is Not a Computer: A Pocket Lexicon of Neuromythology


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Full Product Details

Author:   Raymond Tallis
Publisher:   Imprint Academic
Imprint:   Imprint Academic
Dimensions:   Width: 13.50cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 21.00cm
Weight:   0.200kg
ISBN:  

9780907845942


ISBN 10:   0907845940
Pages:   96
Publication Date:   04 November 2004
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  General ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction The Lexicon Calculations (Computations) Complexity (Sophistication) Fodor Goals (Functions, Objects, Purposes, Aims, Plans) Grammar Information (Knowledge) Instructions Interpretation (Translation) Language (Code) Level Logic Memory Misplaced Explicitness Pattern Process (Processing) Representation (Model) Rule

Reviews

'A spendid exception to the hopeless specialisation of our age.' Mary Midgley, THES. Paul Rogers, Journal of Consciousness Studies A work of radical clarity...a welcome astringent to some of the more vacuous approaches in the discipline.


Raymond Tallis is a splendid exception to the helpless specialisation of our age, being a professor of gerontology who writes clear and useful philosophy... He aims his philosophy at a target that needs it terribly, namely the confused and lazy-minded scientism that blocks our attempts to talk sense about human consciousness. - Mary Midgley, Times Higher Education Supplement. Here is a work of radical clarity... Tallis takes some of the most cherished concepts and exposes the muddles perpetuated by the cognitive science community... It is a welcome astringent to some of the more vacuous approaches in the discipline. - Paul Rogers, Journal of Consciousness Studies. A superb set of accessible and provocative reminders concerning the subtleties involved in our use of language, symbols, signs, and the limitations upon their use when positing explanations (as opposed to merely descriptions) of mental phenomena. Together with the texts listed in the bibliography, I would envisage critical use of Tallis' various lexicon entries providing great tutorial discussion material for psychology, philosophy, and cognitive neuroscience majors alike. I thus strongly recommend this book for its advice to all in search of an explanation (rather than merely a representational redescription) of the phenomenon of human consciousness. Tony Dickinson, Metapsychology Tallis explores this sleight of hand with masterly verve so that readers need never be fooled again. Network


""Raymond Tallis is a splendid exception to the helpless specialisation of our age, being a professor of gerontology who writes clear and useful philosophy... He aims his philosophy at a target that needs it terribly, namely the confused and lazy-minded scientism that blocks our attempts to talk sense about human consciousness."" -- Mary Midgley Times Higher Education Supplement ""Here is a work of radical clarity... Tallis takes some of the most cherished concepts and exposes the muddles perpetuated by the cognitive science community... It is a welcome astringent to some of the more vacuous approaches in the discipline."" -- Paul Rogers Journal of Consciousness Studies ""A superb set of accessible and provocative reminders concerning the subtleties involved in our use of language, symbols, signs, and the limitations upon their use when positing explanations (as opposed to merely descriptions) of mental phenomena. Together with the texts listed in the bibliography, I would envisage critical use of Tallis' various lexicon entries providing great tutorial discussion material for psychology, philosophy, and cognitive neuroscience majors alike. I thus strongly recommend this book for its advice to all in search of an explanation (rather than merely a representational redescription) of the phenomenon of human consciousness."" -- Tony Dickinson Metapsychology ""Tallis explores this sleight of hand with masterly verve so that readers need never be fooled again."" Network Review


Raymond Tallis is a splendid exception to the helpless specialisation of our age, being a professor of gerontology who writes clear and useful philosophy... He aims his philosophy at a target that needs it terribly, namely the confused and lazy-minded scientism that blocks our attempts to talk sense about human consciousness. - Mary Midgley, Times Higher Education Supplement. Here is a work of radical clarity... Tallis takes some of the most cherished concepts and exposes the muddles perpetuated by the cognitive science community... It is a welcome astringent to some of the more vacuous approaches in the discipline. - Paul Rogers, Journal of Consciousness Studies. A superb set of accessible and provocative reminders concerning the subtleties involved in our use of language, symbols, signs, and the limitations upon their use when positing explanations (as opposed to merely descriptions) of mental phenomena. Together with the texts listed in the bibliography, I would envisage critical use of Tallis' various lexicon entries providing great tutorial discussion material for psychology, philosophy, and cognitive neuroscience majors alike. I thus strongly recommend this book for its advice to all in search of an explanation (rather than merely a representational redescription) of the phenomenon of human consciousness. Tony Dickinson, Metapsychology Tallis explores this sleight of hand with masterly verve so that readers need never be fooled again. Network


Author Information

Raymond Tallis's many books include The Hand: A Philosophical Inquiry into Human Being, On the Edge of Certainty: Philosophical Explorations, The Explicit Animal: A Defence of Human Consciousness, A Conversation with Martin Heidegger, The Raymond Tallis Reader and Newton's Sleep: The Two Cultures and the Two Kingdoms.

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