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020 _a9781474262859
_c2713
040 _cdc
082 0 0 _aN78
_bSH770
100 _aShook, John R
245 _aPragmatist Neurophilosophy: American Philosophy and the Brain
260 _aLondon
_bBloomsbury
_c2015
300 _a254p
500 _aincludes index and biblioraphy
505 2 _aPart 1 Historical Considerations 2 Peirce on Neuronal Synchronicity and Spontaneous Order John Kaag 13 3 The Legacy of William James: Lessons for Today`s Twenty-first Century Neuroscience Maxine Sheets-Johnstone 29 4 Dewey, Naturalism, andNeuroaesthetics Russell Pryba Part 2 Reconstructing Neuroscience and Philosophy 81 5 Descendants of Pragmatism: Reconciliation and Reconstruction in Neopragmatism, Neurophilosophy, and Neuropragmatism Tibor Solymosi 6 Neuropragmatic Reconstruction: A Case from Neuroeconomics Mark Tschaepe 111 7 The Most Important Thing Neuropragmatism Can Do: Providing an Alternative to "Cognitive" Neuroscience Eric P. Charles, Sabrina Golonka, and Andrew D. Wilson Part 3 Cognition, Inquiry, and Belief in the Brain and Beyond 151 8 How Inquiry and Method Shape Brain Science: Pragmatism, Embodiment, and Cognitive Neuroscience Tim Rohrer 153 9 Extended Mind and Representation F. Thomas Burke 177 10 The Self as an Evolved Organism that Lives in a Pragmatically Defined World David L. Thompson 203 11 Is Experience Subjective or Objective, or Both, or Neither? John R. Shook 223
902 _bSFS
942 _cBK
_2ddc