•  13
    A dynamic model of brain mechanisms of consciousness and emotion offers more comprehensive and coherent solutions than the traditional Cartesian model to many traditional puzzles in philosophy of mind. One of these is self-awareness: how is it possible for a conscious being to be reflexively aware of its own consciousness? In this chapter I discuss specific ways this question can be treated using a dynamic model. The discussion has two parts. First, I propose, in general terms, a way in which fa…Read more
  •  103
    The Caldron of Consciousness: Motivation, affect and self-organization — An anthology (edited book)
    with Ralph D. Ellis
    John Benjamins. 2000.
    Title descriptionThese new studies by prominent neuroscientists, psychologists and philosophers work toward a coherent framework for understanding emotion and its contribution to the functioning of consciousness in general, as an aspect of self-organizing, embodied subjects. Distinguishing consciousness from unconscious information processing hinges on the role of motivating emotions in all conscious modalities, and how emotional brain processes interact with those traditionally associated with …Read more
  •  2
    Experience and Imagery
    Southern Journal of Philosophy 20 (4): 475-487. 2010.
  •  81
    The function of the cerebellum in cognition, affect and consciousness: Empirical support for the embodied mind
    with J. D. Schmahmann, C. M. Anderson, and R. Ellis
    Consciousness and Emotion 2 (2): 273-309. 2002.
    Editors’ note: These four interrelated discussions of the role of the cerebellum in coordinating emotional and higher cognitive functions developed out of a workshop presented by the four authors for the 2000 Conference of the Cognitive Science Society at the University of Pennsylvania. The four interrelated discussions explore the implications of the recent explosion of cerebellum research suggesting an expanded cerebellar role in higher cognitive functions as well as in the coordination of emo…Read more
  • Irwin Goldstein
    with Ralph D. Ellis and Peter Zachar
    Consciousness and Emotion 3 (1): 21-33. 2002.
  •  11
    Luc Faucher and Christine Tappolet
    with Ralph D. Ellis and Peter Zachar
    Consciousness and Emotion 3 (2): 105-144. 2002.
  •  26
    Book review
    Artificial Intelligence 171 (18): 1127-1135. 2007.
  •  104
    Problem reprezentacji w teoriach poznania ucieleśnionego
    Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 3 (T): 66-82. 2012.
    This paper looks at a central issue with embodiment theories in cognition: the role, if any, they provide for mental representation. Thelen and Smith (1994) hold that the concept of representations is either vacuous or misapplied in such systems. Others maintain a place for representations (e.g. Clark 1996), but are imprecise about their nature and role. It is difficult to understand what those could be if representations are understood in the same sense as that used by computationalists: fixed …Read more
  • Imagination and Logical Possibility
    Dissertation, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 1980.
    Understanding Quine's analysis puts us in a position to connect imagination and logical possibility. The description of what is to be imagined may induce an imaginative experience which can be related to the description in various ways. The description may be 'observational,' meaning that everything that it describes can be observed; in this case imagining under a description is decisive evidence for the possibility of what is described. If the description is non-observational, or contains more …Read more
  •  150
    Three paradoxes of phenomenal consciousness: Bridging the explanatory gap
    with Ralph D. Ellis
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (4): 419-42. 1998.
    Any physical explanation of consciousness seems to leave unresolved the ‘explanatory gap': Isn't it conceivable that all the elements in that explanation could occur, with the same information processing outcomes as in a conscious process, but in the absence of consciousness? E.g. any digital computational process could occur in the absence of consciousness. To resolve this dilemma, we propose a biological-process-oriented physiological- phenomenological characterization of consciousness that ad…Read more
  •  57
    Humphreys solution
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 7 (4): 62-66. 2000.
    [opening paragraph]: It is easy to conceptualize a problem in a way that prevents a solution. If the conceptualization is entrenched in one's culture or profession, it may appear unalterable. But there is so much precedent for the discovery of fruitful reconceptualizations that in the case of most philosophical and scientific puzzles it is probably irrational ever to give up trying. The notion of qualia, understood as phenomenal properties of sensations that can exist as objects of experience fo…Read more
  •  58
    Consciousness, qualia, and re-entrant signaling
    Behavior and Philosophy 19 (1): 21-41. 1991.
    There is a distinction between phenomenal properties and the "phenomenality" of those properties: e.g. between what red is like and what it is like to experience red. To date, reductive accounts explain the former, but not the latter: Nagel is right that they leave something out. This paper attempts a reductive account of what it is like to have a perceptual experience. Four features of such experience are distinguished: the externality, unity, and self-awareness belonging to the content of cons…Read more
  •  2
    The unity of consciousness: An enactivist approach
    with Ralph D. Ellis
    Journal of Mind and Behavior 26 (4): 225-280. 2005.
    The enactivist account of consciousness posits that motivated activation of sensorimotor action imagery anticipates possible action affordances of environmental situations, resulting in representation of the environment with a conscious “feel” associated with the valences motivating the anticipations. This approach makes the mind–body problem and the problem of mental causation easier to resolve, and offers promise for understanding how consciousness results from natural processes. Given a proce…Read more
  •  100
    Machine understanding and the chinese room
    Philosophical Psychology 2 (2): 207-15. 1989.
    John Searle has argued that one can imagine embodying a machine running any computer program without understanding the symbols, and hence that purely computational processes do not yield understanding. The disagreement this argument has generated stems, I hold, from ambiguity in talk of 'understanding'. The concept is analysed as a relation between subjects and symbols having two components: a formal and an intentional. The central question, then becomes whether a machine could possess the inten…Read more
  •  112
    Emergence and the uniqueness of consciousness
    Journal of Consciousness Studies 8 (9-10): 47-59. 2001.
    This paper argues that phenomenal consciousness arises from the forced blending of components that are incompatible, or even logically contradictory, when combined by direct methods available to the subject; and that it is, as a result, analytically, ostensively and comparatively indefinable. First, I examine a variety of cases in which unpredictable novelties arise from the forced merging of contradictory elements, or at least elements that are unable in human experience to co-occur. The point …Read more
  •  8
    Book Reviews (review)
    Mind 96 (384): 580-583. 1987.
  •  114
    The papers in this volume of Consciousness & Emotion Book Series are organized around the theme of "enaction.
  •  179
    Introspection and perception
    Topoi 7 (1): 25-30. 1988.
      Sydney Shoemaker argues that introspection, unlike perception, provides no identification information about the self, and that knowledge of one''s mental states should be conceived as arising in a direct and unmediated fashion from one''s being in those states. I argue that while one does not identify aself as the subject of one''s states, one does frequently identify and misidentify thestates, in ways analogous to the identification of objects in perception, and that in discourse about one''s…Read more
  •  166
    Arguing about consciousness: A blind Alley and a red Herring
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (1): 162-163. 1999.
    O'Brien & Opie hold that phenomenal experience should be identified with “stable patterns of activation” across the brain's neural networks, and that this proposal has the potential for closing the ‘explanatory gap' between mental states and brain processes. I argue that they have too much respect for the conceivability argument and that their proposal already does much to close the explanatory gap, but that a “perspicuous nexus” can in principle never be achieved.
  •  119
    The role of action representations in the dynamics of embodied cognition
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (1): 58-59. 2001.
    Thelen et al. present a convincing explanation of the A-not-B error, but contrary to their own claims, their explanation essentially involves mental representations. As is too common among cognitive scientists, they equate mental representations with representations of external physical objects. They clearly show, however, that representations of bodily actions on physical objects are central to the dynamical system producing the error.
  •  117
    Machine understanding and the chinese room
    Philosophical Psychology 1 (2). 1988.
    John Searle has argued that one can imagine embodying a machine running any computer program without understanding the symbols, and hence that purely computational processes do not yield understanding. The disagreement this argument has generated stems, I hold, from ambiguity in talk of 'understanding'. The concept is analysed as a relation between subjects and symbols having two components: a formal and an intentional. The central question, then becomes whether a machine could possess the inten…Read more
  •  74
    Error in action and belief
    Philosophia 19 (4): 363-401. 1989.
  •  30
    A dynamic model of brain mechanisms of consciousness and emotion offers more comprehensive and coherent solutions than the traditional Cartesian model to many traditional puzzles in philosophy of mind. One of these is self-awareness: how is it possible for a conscious being to be reflexively aware of its own consciousness? In this chapter I discuss specific ways this question can be treated using a dynamic model. The discussion has two parts. First, I propose, in general terms, a way in which fa…Read more
  •  87
    Introspection and the secret agent
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (4): 629-629. 1999.
    The notion of introspection is unparsimonious and unnecessary to explain the experiential grounding of our mentalistic concepts. Instead, we can look at subtle proprioceptive experiences, such as the experience of agency in planning motor acts, which may be explained in part by the phenomenon of collateral discharge or efference copy. Proprioceptive sensations experienced during perceptual and motor activity may account for everything that has traditionally been attributed to a special mental ac…Read more