
Contents
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1.1 Some Background 1.1 Some Background
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1.2 The Great Question—The World Knot 1.2 The Great Question—The World Knot
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1.3 Implications of the Ontological Postulate 1.3 Implications of the Ontological Postulate
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1.3.1 Implication for Philosophy 1.3.1 Implication for Philosophy
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1.3.2 Implications for Psychology 1.3.2 Implications for Psychology
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Arguments for Inaccessibility Arguments for Inaccessibility
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Arguments for Accessibility Arguments for Accessibility
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1.3.3 Implications for Neuroscience 1.3.3 Implications for Neuroscience
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1.4 Some Relevant Conceptual Issues 1.4 Some Relevant Conceptual Issues
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1.4.1 The Seductive Attractiveness of Brain Images 1.4.1 The Seductive Attractiveness of Brain Images
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1.4.2 The Problem of Defining Mental Processes 1.4.2 The Problem of Defining Mental Processes
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1.4.3 The One-to-Many Issue 1.4.3 The One-to-Many Issue
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1.4.4 The Many-to-One Issue 1.4.4 The Many-to-One Issue
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1.4.5 The Sign-Code Distinction 1.4.5 The Sign-Code Distinction
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1.5 Some Relevant Technical Issues 1.5 Some Relevant Technical Issues
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1.5.1 Cumbersome Procedures 1.5.1 Cumbersome Procedures
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1.5.2 The Subtraction Issue 1.5.2 The Subtraction Issue
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1.5.3 The Paucity of Quantification 1.5.3 The Paucity of Quantification
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1.5.4 Indirectness of Measurement 1.5.4 Indirectness of Measurement
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1.5.5 The Timescale Difference 1.5.5 The Timescale Difference
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1.5.6 Variability 1.5.6 Variability
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1.5.7 Statistical Errors 1.5.7 Statistical Errors
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1.6 Some Useful Anatomy 1.6 Some Useful Anatomy
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1.7 A Preview of Forthcoming Conclusions 1.7 A Preview of Forthcoming Conclusions
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Cite
Abstract
This book examines the role played by brain imaging in cognitive neuroscience by exploring published studies and related literature that compare brain images to cognitive processes. It also discusses whether brain imaging and other recording techniques have any role in providing a solution to the question of how the brain makes the mind. The book discusses two ontological postulates exerting influence on the development of the theory regarding the relationship between the mind and the brain, and emphasizes that no concrete solution to the mind–brain problem is provided by macroscopic brain imaging or any other electrical recording activity. It reports the implications of the ontological postulates for philosophy and neuroscience, and also discusses how these postulates affect the course of scientific psychology. Some conceptual and technical issues such as the attractiveness of brain images, the problem of interpreting and defining the mental process, the paucity of quantification, and indirectness as a measurement of brain activity are also discussed.
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