Thanks to this blog here is a five-part discussion between the wonderful Gilbert Ryle and James Urmson. (I notice from the Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy entry on Ryle that J.D. Mabbott must have known Ryle very well. Mabbott and Oakeshott were of course intellectual chums. According to Bob Grant, Oakeshott only ever communicated with two “official” philosophers, one of which was Ryle. On record, Oakeshott very favorably reviewed Ryle’s Concept of Mind, entitled “Body and Mind” in the Spectator. Years later he warmly introduced Ryle who delivered the annual LSE August Comte Memorial Lecture on 26 April, 1962 entitled “A Rational Animal”. Mabbott who read the proofs for On Human Conduct happened to be a member of Ryle’s “Wee Teas” philosophical tea parties (Tony Quinton told me that he himself was one of the more junior members) was the first to recognize Oakeshott’s KH/KT connection with Ryle in his review of Rationalism in politics in Mind.
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July 30, 2010
Short URL concept of mind, james urmson, oakeshott, philosophy of mind, ryle
Here’s an interesting article by Dharmendra Modha and Raghavendra Singh.

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July 29, 2010
Short URL brain, brain science, cognitive science, Macaque, mri, network theory, networks, neurobiology, neurophilosophy, neuroscience

Here is a review of an intellectual biography of Ernest Gellner.
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July 27, 2010
Short URL Edward Said, Ernest Gellner, Isaiah Berlin, liberty, London School of Economics, nationalism, oakeshott, philosophy, philosophy of social science, political philosophy, social constructivism, social epistemology, sociology
(1938-2010)
My friend and colleague Robert Haskell passed away today. Rob was a very gentle, kind and generous man, a man with simple tastes but a man with immense philosophical sophistication. An example of his philosophical breadth and depth is his last published paper “The Access Paradox in Analogical Reasoning and Transfer: Whither Invariance?” Journal of Mind and Behavior (Vol.30 Nos. 1 and 2 Winter and Spring 2009). He will be sadly missed.
Below is a photo of Rob (far right, the usual scowl belying his gentle nature) at a reception for Ruth Millikan at NEI in April of 2008 – David Livingstone Smith, Rob’s longtime colleague and friend is on the far left. As and when more details are available from others on Rob’s work and life, and I have had a chance to reflect on his work, I will update this post.

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July 17, 2010
Short URL cognitive science, new england institute, philosophy of mind, philosophy of social science, psychology, robert haskell
Here is my introduction to the themed issue of Cognitive Systems Research. The full collection is now available here.
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July 13, 2010
Short URL active externalism, active perception, Adams and Aizawa, Alva Noë, Alzheimer's, Andy Clark, artificial intelligence, biotechnology, Bounds of Cognition, brain science, cognitive science, cognitive systems, Cognitive Systems and the Extended Mind, cognitive systems research, colin allen, collective intentionality, complexity, computational intelligence, consciousness, cyborgs, dan weiskopf, david chalmers, distributed cognition, distributed knowledge, duncan prichard, Embedded, embodiment, enactivism, Evan Thompson, extended cognitive systems, extended mind, externalism, feedback, folk psychology, francesco varela, Fred Adams, Georg Theiner, mark rowlands, Matthew Barker, metaphysics, Nivedita Gangopadhyay, philip robbins, philosophy of mind, philosophy of science, philosophy of social science, robert goldstone, robert rupert, robert wilson, sandy goldberg, Supersizing the Mind, susan hurley, Zoe Drayson
The articles comprising the themed issue of Cognitive Systems Research are now available from the publisher’s Articles in Press page.
Note from Elsevier:
The section “Articles in Press” contains peer reviewed accepted articles to be published in this journal. When the final article is assigned to an issue of the journal, the “Article in Press” version will be removed from this section and will appear in the associated published journal issue. The date it was first made available online will be carried over. Please be aware that although “Articles in Press” do not have all bibliographic details available yet, they can already be cited using the year of online availability and the DOI as follows: Author(s), Article Title, Journal (Year), DOI.
Please consult the journal’s reference style for the exact appearance of these elements, abbreviation of journal names and the use of punctuation.
There are three types of “Articles in Press”:
Accepted manuscripts: these are articles that have been peer reviewed and accepted for publication by the Editorial Board. The articles have not yet been copy edited and/or formatted in the journal house style.
Uncorrected proofs: these are copy edited and formatted articles that are not yet finalized and that will be corrected by the authors. Therefore the text could change before final publication.
Corrected proofs: these are articles containing the authors’ corrections and may, or may not yet have specific issue and page numbers assigned.
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July 10, 2010
Short URL active externalism, Alva Noë, Alzheimer's, Andy Clark, cognitive science, cognitive systems, cognitive systems research, consciousness, cyborgs, david chalmers, distributed cognition, Embedded, embodiment, enactivism, epistemology, extended cognitive systems, extended mind, externalism, metaphysics, philosophy of mind, philosophy of science, social ontology
Here’s a draft of a review by Andreas Elpidorou to appear in Minds and Machines of Rob Rupert’s Cognitive Systems and the Extended Mind.
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July 3, 2010
Short URL Andreas Elpidorou, Andy Clark, cognition, cognitive science, cognitive systems, Cognitive Systems and the Extended Mind, david chalmers, extended mind, externalism, philosophy of mind, robert rupert