This article is a philosopher’s expanded review of two recent books on neurophysiology: Rodolfo Llinás’s I of the Vortex and György Buszáki’s Rhythms of the Brain. Researchers such as these are converging on a view of consciousness as originating in motility and as inherently temporal due to the brainwave oscillations that underlay it. Most current discussions of consciousness include implicit philosophical presuppositions inherited from the canon of Plato, Aristotle, Descartes, and Kant, e.g. that consciousness is self-reflective, passive, and timeless. Because of this, Llinás’s and Buszáki’s insights may not be fully appreciated. Western philosophy, however, also includes what might be described as a counter-tradition—and one that is more...
Edgar Wilson, M.D. a physician and founder of the Colorado Association for Psychophysiologic Researc...
In this article we look at the brain’s structure and function from a philosophical perspective. Alth...
What is consciousness? How far is it unique to human beings? What does modern science say about it? ...
Science has developed technology which has enabled researchers to relate brain activity to electrica...
This article discusses philosophical issues concerning theory of neural correlates of consciousness...
Consciousness of time and the time of consciousnessThe presented article deals with two pheno...
My target article (henceforth referred to as TA) presents evidence for causal interactions between c...
While some are currently debating whether time may or may not be an illusion, others keep devoting t...
This article introduces the mathematical models of the thinking laws in the internal structure of co...
The first argument in this article is that, absent what would truly be a paradigm change (for once ...
In this article, I argue that consciousness is a unique way of processing information, in that: it p...
© 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. This article reviews different explanations of what consci...
Abstract: The article begins with a discussion about what might constitute consciousness in entities...
My 2002 Journal of Consciousness Studies target article on "How could conscious experiences affect b...
This article discusses philosophical issues concerning theory of neural correlates of consciousness ...
Edgar Wilson, M.D. a physician and founder of the Colorado Association for Psychophysiologic Researc...
In this article we look at the brain’s structure and function from a philosophical perspective. Alth...
What is consciousness? How far is it unique to human beings? What does modern science say about it? ...
Science has developed technology which has enabled researchers to relate brain activity to electrica...
This article discusses philosophical issues concerning theory of neural correlates of consciousness...
Consciousness of time and the time of consciousnessThe presented article deals with two pheno...
My target article (henceforth referred to as TA) presents evidence for causal interactions between c...
While some are currently debating whether time may or may not be an illusion, others keep devoting t...
This article introduces the mathematical models of the thinking laws in the internal structure of co...
The first argument in this article is that, absent what would truly be a paradigm change (for once ...
In this article, I argue that consciousness is a unique way of processing information, in that: it p...
© 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. This article reviews different explanations of what consci...
Abstract: The article begins with a discussion about what might constitute consciousness in entities...
My 2002 Journal of Consciousness Studies target article on "How could conscious experiences affect b...
This article discusses philosophical issues concerning theory of neural correlates of consciousness ...
Edgar Wilson, M.D. a physician and founder of the Colorado Association for Psychophysiologic Researc...
In this article we look at the brain’s structure and function from a philosophical perspective. Alth...
What is consciousness? How far is it unique to human beings? What does modern science say about it? ...