Works matching IS 0140525X AND DT 1997 AND VI 20 AND IP 1
Results: 98
Biology versus computation in the study of consciousness.
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- Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 1997, v. 20, n. 1, p. 159, doi. 10.1017/S0140525X97330052
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On widening the explanatory gap.
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Phenomenal consciousness and what it's like.
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Consciousness versus states of being conscious.
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- 1997
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Perception and content.
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- 1997
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Empirical status of Block's phenomenal/access distinction.
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- 1997
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On the relation between phenomenal and representational properties.
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- 1997
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Consciousness and mental representation.
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- 1997
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P-consciousness presentation/A-consciousness representation.
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- 1997
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Availability: The cognitive basis of experience.
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- 1997
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Two conceptions of access-consciousness.
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- 1997
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Consciousness by the lights of logic and commonsense.
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- 1997
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An example of access-consciousness without phenomenal consciousness?
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Age preferences in mates: An even closer look, without the distorting lenses.
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- Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 1997, v. 20, n. 1, p. 140, doi. 10.1017/S0140525X97230049
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Differences between men and women in age preferences for a same-sex partner.
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Individual differences in age preferences in mates: Taking a closer look.
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Understanding and explaining real self-deception.
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- Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 1997, v. 20, n. 1, p. 127, doi. 10.1017/S0140525X9751003X
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Does self-deception involve intentional biasing?
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Pragmatically pristine, the dialogical cause of self-deception.
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- 1997
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Flavors of self-deception: Ontology and epidemiology.
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- 1997
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The uses of self-deception.
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- 1997
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Direct, fully intentional self-deception is also real.
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- 1997
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Self-deceiving intentions.
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- 1997
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Self-deceivers' intentions and possessions.
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- 1997
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Distal versus proximal mechanisms of `real' self-deception.
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- 1997
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Self-deception and the desire to believe.
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- 1997
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The many faces of self-deception.
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- 1997
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Hypnotic responding and self-deception.
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- 1997
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Real ascriptions of self-deception are fallible moral judgments.
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- 1997
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Self-deceived about self-deception: An evolutionary analysis.
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- 1997
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Intentional self-deception can and does occur.
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- 1997
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Partial belief as a solution to the logical problem of holding simultaneous, contrary beliefs in...
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- 1997
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Detecting deception.
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- 1997
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Is real self-deception really all that biased?
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- 1997
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Self, awareness of self, and the illusion of control.
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- 1997
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How many beliefs can dance in the head of the self-deceived?
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- 1997
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It may require another person to deceive oneself.
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- 1997
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Once more with feeling: The role of emotion in self-deception.
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- 1997
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Paradoxical self-deception: Maybe not so paradoxical after all.
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- 1997
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Varieties of self-deception.
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- 1997
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Defending intentionalist accounts of self-deception.
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- 1997
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Biased steps toward reasonable conclusions: How self-deception remains hidden.
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- 1997
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Deceived by metaphor.
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- 1997
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Thinking and believing in self-deception.
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- 1997
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Self-deception vs. self-caused deception: A comment on Professor Mele.
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- 1997
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If belief is behavior, what controls it?
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- 1997
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Real self-deception.
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- Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 1997, v. 20, n. 1, p. 91, doi. 10.1017/S0140525X97000034
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Relational learning re-examined.
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- Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 1997, v. 20, n. 1, p. 83, doi. 10.1017/S0140525X97440025
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Evolution's gift is the right account of the origin of recoding functions.
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- 1997
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- Editorial
Relational problems are not fully solved by a temporal sequence of statistical learning episodes.
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- 1997
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- Editorial