Tim Crane is professor of philosophy at the Central European University, Buda-pest.. He has written on a number of topics in the philosophy of mind, including intentionality, consciousn
Trang 1Tim Crane is professor of philosophy at the Central European University,
Buda-pest He has written on a number of topics in the philosophy of mind, including intentionality, consciousness, perception, mental causation, and physicalism
His books include The Mechanical Mind (1995, 3rd edition 2015), Elements of Mind (2001), The Objects of Thought (2013), Aspects of Psychologism (2014), The Meaning of Belief (2017), and (as editor) The Contents of Experience (1992) and A Debate on Dispositions (1996) He is the Philosophy Consultant Editor of the TLS.
Katalin Farkas is professor of philosophy at the Central European University,
Budapest Her main interests are the philosophy of mind and epistemology
Her book The Subject’s Point of View (OUP 2008) defends an internalist
con-ception of the boundaries of the mind
Carrie Figdor is associate professor at the University of Iowa, Department of
Philosophy and Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Neuroscience She pub-lishes on topics at the intersection of philosophy of mind, science, and language,
on epistemology and ethics of journalism, and on metaphysics Her monograph
Pieces of Mind: The Proper Domain of Psychological Predicates is forthcom-ing with Oxford University Press, and her work has appeared in The Journal of Philosophy, Philosophy of Science, Topics in Cognitive Science, Mind & Lan-guage, Frontiers in Communication, among others She co-hosts “New Books
in Philosophy” (http://newbooksnetwork.com/category/philosophy/) a podcast that features interviews with philosophers about their new books
Jens Johansson is Professor of Practical Philosophy at Uppsala University He
has published a number of essays on the philosophy of death, personal identity,
and related issues, and co-edited The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Death
(2013, with Ben Bradley and Fred Feldman)
Amy Kind is Russell K Pitzer Professor of Philosophy at Claremont McKenna
College Her research interests lie broadly in the philosophy of mind, but most
of her work centers on issues relating to imagination and to phenomenal
con-sciousness In addition to authoring the introductory textbook Persons and
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