Neural plasticity and the location of mental events
Australasian Journal of Philosophy 52 (August):154-162 (1974)
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| Keywords | Identity Mental Act Metaphysics Neurophysiology | |||||||||
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William S. Robinson, Epiphenomenalism. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Robert C. Coburn (1963). Shaffer on the Identity of Mental States and Brain Processes. Journal of Philosophy 60 (February):89-92.
John G. Cox (1982). Mental Events Must Have Spatial Location. Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 63 (July):270-274.
Paul Noordhof (2002). Personal Dualism and the Argument From Differential Vagueness. Philosophical Papers 31 (1):63-86.
Paul K. Feyerabend (1963). Mental Events and the Brain. Journal of Philosophy 40 (May):295-6.
Christopher D. Green & Grant R. Gillett (1995). Are Mental Events Preceded by Their Physical Causes? Philosophical Psychology 8 (4):333-340.
Jerome A. Shaffer (1961). Could Mental States Be Brain Processes? Journal of Philosophy 58 (December):813-22.
Stephen J. Noren (1979). Anomalous Monism, Events, and 'the Mental'. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 40 (September):64-74.
Michael Lockwood (1984). Einstein and the Identity Theory. Analysis 44 (January):22-25.
Jerome A. Shaffer (1963). Mental Events and the Brain. Journal of Philosophy 60 (March):160-6.
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