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Minds and Machines, Volume 13
Volume 13, Number 1, February 2003
- Bruce J. MacLennan:
Transcending Turing Computability. 3-22 - Gualtiero Piccinini:
Alan Turing and the Mathematical Objection. 23-48 - Bruno Scarpellini:
Two Undecidable Problems of Analysis. 49-77 - Bruno Scarpellini:
Comments on 'Two Undecidable Problems of Analysis'. 79-85 - Oron Shagrir, Itamar Pitowsky:
Physical Hypercomputation and the Church-Turing Thesis. 87-101 - Hava T. Siegelmann:
Neural and Super-Turing Computing. 103-114 - Mike Stannett:
Computation and Hypercomputation. 115-153 - Eric Steinhart:
Supermachines and Superminds. 155-186
Volume 13, Number 2, May 2003
- Chris Dobbyn, Susan Stuart:
The Self as an Embedded Agent. 187-201 - Donald Levy:
How to Psychoanalyze a Robot: Unconscious Cognition and the Evolution of Intentionality. 203-212 - Baljinder Sahdra, Paul Thagard:
Self-Deception and Emotional Coherence. 213-231 - John Bolender:
The Genealogy of the Moral Modules. 233-255 - Jakob Hohwy:
A Reductio of Kripke-Wittgenstein's Objections to Dispositionalism about Meaning. 257-268 - Jordi Fernández:
Explanation by Computer Simulation in Cognitive Science. 269-284 - Jerome C. Wakefield:
The Chinese Room Argument Reconsidered: Essentialism, Indeterminacy, and Strong AI. 285-319 - Yorick Wilks:
Book Review: Jerry Fodor, The Mind Doesn't Work That Way, Cambridge, MA: Bradford Books/MIT Press, 2000, 126 pp., ISBN: 0-262-06212-7. 321-327 - Gualtiero Piccinini:
Book Review: John von Neumann, The Computer and the Brain, 2nd edition. 327-332 - Hans D. Muller:
Book Review: Kepa Korta, Ernest Sosa, and Xabier Arrazola (eds). 332-336
Volume 13, Number 3, August 2003
- James H. Moor:
Editor's Note. 337 - Nicholas Lacey, Mark H. Lee:
The Epistemological Foundations of Artificial Agents. 339-365 - Mark H. Lee, Nicholas Lacey:
The Influence of Epistemology on the Design of Artificial Agents. 367-395 - William J. Rapaport:
What Did You Mean by That? Misunderstanding, Negotiation, and Syntactic Semantics. 397-427 - Luca Spalazzi:
M. J. Wooldridge, Reasoning about Rational Agents, Intelligent Robots and Autonomous Agents Series, Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2000, xv+227 pp., $35.00 (hardcover), ISBN 0-262-23213-8. 429-435 - Richard Wyatt:
James H. Fetzer, Computers and Cognition: Why Minds Are Not Machines, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 2001, xix + 323 pp., $128.00 (hardcover), ISBN 0-792-36615-8. 435-441 - James Geller:
John Sowa, Knowledge Representation: Logical, Philosophical, and Computational Foundations, Brooks/Cole, 2000, 512 pp., $70.95 (cloth), ISBN 0-534-94965-7. 441-444 - David J. Cole:
Gerald Edelman and Giulio Tononi, A Universe of Consciousness: How Matter Becomes Imagination, New York: Basic Books, 2000, xiii+ 274 pp., $17.00 (paper), ISBN 0-465-01377-5. 445-449 - Nigel J. T. Thomas:
Michael Tye, Consciousness, Color, and Content, Representation and Mind Series, Cambridge, MA/London: A Bradford Book, MIT Press, 2000, xiii + 198 pp., $29.95 (cloth), ISBN 0-262-20129-1. 449-452 - Hans D. Muller:
Kepa Korta, Ernest Sosa, and Xabier Arrazola, eds., Cognition, Agency and Rationality: Proceedings of the Fifth International Colloquium on Cognitive Science, Philosophical Studies Series 79, Dordrecht/Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999, xi + 187 pp., $93.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-792-35973-9. 452-457
Volume 13, Number 4, November 2003
- Luciano Floridi:
Two Approaches to the Philosophy of Information. 459-469 - Frederick Adams:
The Informational Turn in Philosophy. 471-501 - Johan van Benthem:
Logic and the Dynamics of Information. 503-519 - Gordana Dodig-Crnkovic:
Shifting the Paradigm of Philosophy of Science: Philosophy of Information and a New Renaissance. 521-536 - Viola Schiaffonati:
A Framework for the Foundation of the Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence. 537-552 - Ken Herold:
An Information Continuum Conjecture. 553-566 - Manuel Bremer:
Do Logical Truths Carry Information? 567-575 - Anthony Chemero:
Information for Perception and Information Processing. 577-588
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