Isomorphism: Philosophical implications
Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (6):975-976 (1999)
| Abstract | The originator of the notion of structural isomorphism was the philosopher Roy Wood Sellars. Many modern philosophers are unaware how this notion vitiates their attacks on the concept of an internal sensory presentation. His view that this allowed for corrective feedback undercuts Palmer's belief that there is a mapping of objects. The privacy of subjective experience is also shown not to be inviolable. | |||||||||
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Douglas M. Snyder (1988). On Complementarity and Causal Isomorphism. Journal of Mind and Behavior 9:1-4.
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Lloyd Kaufman (1998). We Can't Fill in Answers to Philosophical Questions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (6):760-761.
Valla Pishva (1998). The Practical and Conceptual Case Against Isomorphism: Evolution and Homomorphism. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (6):768-769.
Riccardo Manzotti & Giulio Sandini (2002). What Does “Isomorphism Between Conscious Representations and the Structure of the World” Mean? Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (3):346-347.
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