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Raymond Tallis

Victoria University of Manchester
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    147
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  •  Events
    1
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 More details
  • Victoria University of Manchester
    Department of Philosophy
    Researcher
Manchester, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Mind
  • All publications (147)
  • I Am: An Inquiry Into First-person Being
    Appraisal 5. 2005.
  •  18
    Tallis in Wonderland
    Philosophy Now 81 46-47. 2010.
  •  9
    Tallis in Wonderland: Taking Issue With ‘The God Issue’
    Philosophy Now 101 48-49. 2014.
  •  52
    Draining The River
    Philosophy Now 95 48-49. 2013.
  •  48
    Seeing Time
    Philosophy Now 84 51-52. 2011.
    Aspects of Time
  •  51
    Where Is My Itch?
    Philosophy Now 94 50-51. 2013.
  •  63
    A Hasty Report From A Tearing Hurry
    Philosophy Now 90 48-49. 2012.
    Philosophy of Consciousness
  •  52
    Not Saussure: A Critique of Post-Saussurean Literary Theory
    Springer. 2016.
    This work subjects the fundamental ideas of Derrida, Lacan, Barthes and their followers to an examination and demonstrates the baselessness of post-Saussurean claims about the relations between language, reality and self.
    European PhilosophyContinental Structuralism
  •  75
    Tye on 'the subjective qualities of experience': A critique
    Philosophical Investigations 12 (July): 217-222. 1989.
    Qualia and MaterialismExplaining Consciousness?Subjectivity and Consciousness
  •  21
    Increasing Longevity: Medical, Social and Political Implications
    Royal College of Physicians. 1998.
    Medical Ethics
  •  79
    Tallis in Wonderland: The Professor of Data-Lean Generalisations
    Philosophy Now 68 46-47. 2008.
  •  91
    Tallis in Wonderland: Who Caught that Ball?
    Philosophy Now 65 38-39. 2008.
  •  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
    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 this book, Ray Tallis takes us through the different levels of our hunger. Out of our primary appetites arise a myriad of pleasures and tastes that are elaborated in second-level hedonistic hungers creating new values. The evolution of appetite into desire opens the way to social hungers such as the hunger for acknowledgement. Awareness of death awakens a further level of hunger for something that lies beyond the pell-mell of successive experiences leading towards extinction. The art of living is the art of managing our hungers
    Ethics
  •  29
    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
    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 with the supposed computational activity of the brain; and to empty or eliminate it by denying the reality of qualia. Raymond Tallis's critique concludes with a long look at man--"the explicit animal"--that makes the irreducible mystery of human consciousness impossible to overlook or deny.
    Philosophy of Consciousness, General Works
  •  16
    A Small Explosion FromA (Relatively) Quiet Atheist
    Philosophy Now 103 52-53. 2014.
  •  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.
    European PhilosophyMichel Foucault
  • Machine generated contents note: Introduction; 1. Identity of meaning / Adrian Poole; 2. Identity and the law / Lionel Bently; 3. Species-identity / Peter Crane; 4. Mathematical identity / Marcus Du Sautoy; 5. Immunological identity / Philippa Marrack; 6. Visualizing identity / Ludmilla Jordanova; 7. Musical identity / Christopher Hogwood; 8. Identity and the mind (review)
    In Giselle Walker & Elisabeth Leedham-Green (eds.), Identity, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
    Identity, MiscSpecies
  •  18
    The knowing animal: a philosophical inquiry into knowledge and truth
    Edinburgh University Press. 2005.
    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.
    Varieties of Knowledge
  •  8
    Ideas and Scholarship in Philosophy
    Philosophy Now 104 48-49. 2014.
  •  59
    Tallis in Wonderland: On Not Choosing the Alternative
    Philosophy Now 66 22-23. 2008.
  •  98
    On Points
    Philosophy Now 87 48-49. 2011.
    Temporal Ontology
  • Evidence-based and Evidence-free Generalisations: a Tale of Two Cultures
    In David Fuller & Patricia Waugh (eds.), The Arts and Sciences of Criticism, Oxford University Press. 1999.
    Evidence-Based Medicine
  •  59
    Saving the Self
    Philosophy Now 63 16-18. 2007.
  •  127
    Why minds are not computers
    The Philosophers' Magazine 28 (28): 52-55. 2004.
    Philosophy of Cognitive ScienceAspects of Consciousness
  •  58
    An Introduction To Incontinental Philosophy
    Philosophy Now 85 48-49. 2011.
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