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177A Neo-Intuitive Proposal for Kaluza-Klein UnificationFoundations of Physics 18 (11): 1093-1139. 1988.This paper addresses a central question of contemporary theoretical physics: Can a unified account be provided for the known forces of nature? The issue is brought into focus by considering the recently revived Kaluza-Klein approach to unification, a program entailing dimensional transformation through cosmogony. First it is demonstrated that, in a certain sense, revitalized Kaluza-Klein theory appears to undermine the intuitive foundations of mathematical physics, but that this implicit consequ…Read more
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16The Paradox of Mind and Matter: Utterly Different Yet One and the SameIn B. Rubik (ed.), The Interrelationship Between Mind and Matter, Center For Frontier Sciences Temple University. 1992.
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71SynsymmetryScientia (International Review of Scientific Synthesis) 110 (5-8): 539-549. 1975.The violation of parity in weak interactions demonstrated in 1956 was an event that shook the foundations of physics. Since that time, the status of physical symmetry has been very much in doubt. The problem is presently addressed by first examining the essential relation between symmetry and asymmetry. Then, through the medium of qualitative mathematics, an attempt is made to show how these opposites may be fused in a topological structure expressing a new principle, that of "synsymmetry".
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45Evolution of Attentional Processes in the Human OrganismGroup Analysis 32 (2): 243-253. 1999.This article explores the evolution of human attention, focusing particularly on the phylogenetic and ontogenetic implications of the work of the American social psychiatrist Trigant Burrow. Attentional development is linked to the emergence of visual perspective, and this, in turn, is related to Burrow's notion of `ditention' (divided or partitive attention). Burrow's distinction between `ditention' and `cotention' (total organismic awareness) is examined, and, expanding on this, a threefold pa…Read more
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College of Staten Island (CUNY)Emeritus Professor, Psychology Department/retired Instructor, Philosophy DepartmentRetired faculty
Staten Island, New York, United States of America