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Supersizing the Mind

Good news. Andy Clark’s eagerly awaited book Supersizing the Mind is now available. I notice that Clark and Chalmers’ “The Extended Mind” is reprinted here as well. Groovy Dali-esque cover!  (Now that I actually have the book in my hands, I see that it is a Dali painting). Something to look forward to will be…

Special Double Issue: Mind and Behavior

The special double issue of Mind and Behavior on Evolutionary Biology and the Central Problems of Cognitive Science is now available. Click for contents Click for abstracts

Evolutionary Biology and the Central Problems of Cognitive Science

This is a trailer to the soon to be released special double issue of The Journal of Mind and Behavior (abstracts will appear shortly on the JMB website)

New Issue of Journal of Mind and Behavior

Vol.28 No 3. Summer 2007 Vol.28 No 4. Autumn 2007 Why History Matters: Associations and Causal Judgment in Hume and Cognitive Science. Mark Collier, University of Minnesota, Morris The Phenomenology of Freedom. Tomis Kapitan, Northern Illinois University Process, Quantum Coherence, and the Stream of Consciousness. Keith A. Choquette, Brockton, Massachusetts The Frontal Feedback Model of…

Supersizing the Mind

I read on Dave Chalmers’ weblog that he’s written the preface to Andy Clark’s forthcoming Supersizing the Mind: Embodiment, Action, and Cognitive Extension. It’s very exciting news that a) there is a new book by Clark, perhaps the best stylist around and that b) Chalmers (and Clark) have returned to considering their thesis of active externalism ten years after…

Dennett’s Breaking the Spell

Update: A digital version of this essay is now available from the Journal of Mind and Behavior website – click here or here. Here is a final MS of my review essay on Dennett’s Breaking the Spell published in Journal of Mind and Behavior (Vol. 27 No. 3 & 4 Summer & Autumn 2006). 

Bounds of Cognition II

Press release cum interview for The Bounds of Cognition, a book I have already heartily recommended. I’m pleased to say that the authors are contributing to a themed issue of the Journal of Mind and Behavior on the “extended mind” that I’m editing.