Volume
22, Number 1, Winter 2001
Epistemic
Unification. Mitchell R. Haney, Missouri Western State
College and HermanE. Stark, South Suburban College
Historical
Origins of the Modern Mind/Body Split. Richard E. Lind,
Springfield, Missouri
The
Case for Intrinsic Theory: V. Some Arguments from James Thomas Natsoulas, University of California, Davis
Right
Brain Damage, Body Image, and Language: A Psychoanalytic Perspective. Catherine Morin, Institut National de la Santé et de
la Recherche Médicale Stéphane Thibierge, Université
de Poitiers and Michel Perrigot, Hôpital La Salpêtrière
A
Spinozist Approach to the Conceptual Gap in Consciousness
Studies. Frederick B. Mills, BowieState University
Book
Reviews
Shamanism:
The Neural Ecology of Consciousness and Healing. Michael
Winkelman. Westport, Connecticut: Bergin & Garvey, 2000.
Reviewed by Joseph Glicksohn, Bar-Ilan University
Volume
22, Number 2, Spring 2001
The
Split-Brain Debate Revisited: On the Importance of Language
and Self-Recognition for Right Hemispheric Consciousness. Alain Morin, Ste-Foy, Québec, Canada
The
Case for Intrinsic Theory: VI. Incompatibilities Within the
Stream of Consciousness. Thomas Natsoulas, University
of California, Davis
Apart
from Genetics: What Makes Monozygotic Twins Similar? George
Mandler, University of California, San Diego and University
College London
The
Concept of Mental Illness: An Analysis of Four Pivotal Issues. Robert L. Woolfolk, Princeton University
Is
Crime in the Genes? A Critical Review of Twin and Adoption
Studies of Criminality and Antisocial Behavior. Jay Joseph,
La Familia Counseling Service
Volume
22, Number 3, Summer 2001
On
the Intrinsic Nature of States of Consciousness: Attempted
Inroads from the First-Person Perspective. Thomas Natsoulas,
University of California, Davis
Structural
Causation and Psychological Explanation. Jeffrey Hershfiel,
Wichita State University
Conceiving
Simple Experiences. Michael V. Antony, University of Haifa
Free
Will and Events in the Brain. Grant R. Gillett, Bioethics
Center, University of Otago
Can
Dynamical Systems Explain Mental Causation? Ralph D. Ellis,
Clark Atlanta University
Book
Reviews
The
Mind Doesn’t Work That Way. Jerry Fodor. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
The MIT Press, 2000. Reviewed by Alexander Batthyany, University
of Vienna
The
Vile Village. Lemony Snicket (Daniel Handler). New York:
HarperCollins, 2001. Reviewed by Steven Connelly, Indiana
State University
Volume
22, Number 4, Autumn 2001
Metaphor
and Consciousness: The Path Less Taken. Joseph Glicksohn,
Bar-Ilan University
Complexity
Theory, Quantum Mechanics and Radically Free Self Determination. Mark Stephen Pestana, Grand Valley State University
The
Affiliation of Methodology with Ontology in a Scientific Psychology. Matthew P. Spackman and Richard N. Williams, Brigham Young
University
The
Process of Knowing: A Biocognitive Epistemology. Mario
E. Martinez, Institute of Biocognitive Psychology
The
Concrete State: The Basic Components of James’s Stream of
Consciousness. Thomas Natsoulas, University of California,
Davis
The
Concrete State Continued. Thomas Natsoulas, University
of California, Davis
Book
Reviews
Animal
Minds: Beyond Cognition to Consciousness. Donald R. Griffin.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001. Reviewed by Dr.
L.A. Kemmerer, Hoquiam, WA
Private
Heresies. Aleksandra Kasuba. San Jose: Author’s Choice
Press, 2000. Reviewed by Scott R. Stalcup, Indiana State University