•  22
    Hunger
    Routledge. 2008.
    Understanding hunger is the key to understanding ourselves. While they seem the most obvious things about us, our hungers are also deeply mysterious, arising out of, and casting light on, the unique character of human consciousness. In humans, physiological need is transformed into a multitude of needs that are remote from organic necessity. Even first-level biological hunger is experienced differently in humans; and little in human feeding behaviour has any parallel in the animal kingdom.In thi…Read more
  •  93
    Tallis in Wonderland: Who Caught that Ball?
    Philosophy Now 65 38-39. 2008.
  •  16
    A Small Explosion FromA (Relatively) Quiet Atheist
    Philosophy Now 103 52-53. 2014.
  •  30
    The explicit animal: a defence of human consciousness
    Macmillan Academic and Professional. 1991.
    There has been an extraordinary resurgence of interest in the enigma of human consciousness among neuroscientists, psychologists, and professional philosophers. Much work is aimed at accommodating consciousness within the currently dominant physicalist world picture. This book is a comprehensive and sometimes impassioned attack to "biologize" consciousness by explaining its origin in evolutionary terms and identifying mental phenomena with brain processes; to "computerize" it by identifying mind…Read more
  •  87
    On Waiting
    Philosophy Now 96 48-49. 2013.
  •  45
    Thinking Straight About Curved Space
    Philosophy Now 108 51-52. 2015.
  • A critique of neuromythology
    In Raymond Tallis & Howard Robinson (eds.), The Pursuit of mind, Carcanet. pp. 86--109. 1991.
  •  19
    Completes a trilogy that aims to revolutionise our understanding of what it is to be a human being without recourse to theology and supernatural explanations on the one hand or scientism and naturalistic explanations on the other.
  •  9
    Ideas and Scholarship in Philosophy
    Philosophy Now 104 48-49. 2014.
  •  61
  •  98
    On Points
    Philosophy Now 87 48-49. 2011.
  •  58
    An Introduction To Incontinental Philosophy
    Philosophy Now 85 48-49. 2011.
  •  59
    Saving the Self
    Philosophy Now 63 16-18. 2007.
  •  127
    Why minds are not computers
    The Philosophers' Magazine 28 (28): 52-55. 2004.
  •  25
    The most distinctive activities of humankind and the source of its greatest achievements are the scientific investigation of the world and the creation of art. Newton's Sleep examines their complementary roles in contemporary life and defends both against those who assert that science is spiritually empty and inherently dangerous and that art is trivialised by a lack of social mission.
  •  25
    Justifying the Search
    Philosophy Now 40 34-35. 2003.
  •  184
    Human freedom as a reality-producing illusion
    The Monist 86 (2): 200-219. 2003.
    This is a good time for determinists. One hundred and fifty years of Darwinian thought have undermined belief in the exceptional status of human beings. Biological reductionism is in the ascendant. One of its most recent manifestations—evolutionary psychology, which has been widely influential both within and beyond academe—argues that individual behaviour and even social institutions are expressions of genes, the vast majority of which are common to humans and the higher primates. The implicit,…Read more
  •  25
    Tallis in Wonderland: Don’t Tell Him, Pike!
    Philosophy Now 74 50-51. 2009.
  •  20
    Causes As (Local) Oomph
    Philosophy Now 100 48-49. 2014.
  •  101
    Enhancing Humanity
    Philosophy Now 61 6-7. 2007.
  •  26
    These essays from one of our most stimulating thinkers showcase Tallis's infectious fascination, indeed intoxication, with the infinite complexity of human lives and the human condition. In the title essay, we join Tallis on a stroll around his local park - and the intricate passages of his own consciousness - as he uses the motif of the walk, the amble, to occasion a series of meditations on the freedoms that only human beings possess. In subsequent essays, the flaneur thinks about his brain, h…Read more
  •  49
    The Shocking Yawn
    Philosophy Now 93 48-49. 2012.
  •  32
    Martin Heidegger is one of the most important as well as one of the most difficult thinkers of the last century. Raymond Tallis, who has been arguing with Heidegger for over thirty years, illuminates his fundamental ideas through an imaginary conversation, which is both relaxed and rigorous, witty and profound.
  • Machine generated contents note: Introduction; 1
    In Giselle Walker & Elisabeth Leedham-Green (eds.), Identity, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
  •  2
  •  13
    In these lively and provocative essays, philosopher, polymath and all-round intellectual heavyweight, Raymond Tallis debunks commonplace truths, exposes woolly thinking and pulls the rug from beneath a wide range of commentator whether scientist, theologian, philosopher or pundit. Tallis takes to task much of contemporary science and philosophy, arguing that they are guilty of taking us down ever narrowing conduits of problem solving that only invite ever more complex responses and in doing so h…Read more