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    Phantom Sensations: What's a Brain to Do? A Critical Review of the Re-mapping Hypothesis
    Journal of Cognition and Neuroethics 5 (1): 1-25. 2018.
    I will review the most widely held account of phantom sensations; the “re-mapping hypothesis.” According to the re-mapping hypothesis, amputation is followed by significant neural reorganization that, over time, restores the alignment between the brain’s representation of and the actual condition of the body. Implicit in the re-mapping hypothesis is the view that the brain’s primary function is to accurately represent the body. In response, I propose an alternative theory, the “preservation hypo…Read more