Table of Contents

EDITORIAL

Another Front in the Science Wars?   full text

CONTINUING DISCUSSION

V.S. Ramachandran
Sharpening Up ‘The Science of Art’: An Interview with Anthony Freeman   full text
Bruno Deschênes
Partial Views and Universals: Comments of a Musician on ‘Art and the Brain’

REFEREED PAPERS

Benny Shanon
Altered Temporality   abstract
Paul Marshall
Transforming the World Into Experience: An Idealist Experiment   abstract

CONFERENCE REPORT

P. Århem, H. Liljenström and B.I.B. Lindhal
Unconscious–Conscious: Report on a Workshop in Sigtuna, Sweden, 24–27 August 2000

POETRY

Four Poems   full text

BOOK REVIEWS

Jean Petitot, Francisco J. Varela, et al. (ed.),
Naturalizing Pheneomenology, reviewed by Josef Parnas
David Robinson (ed.),
Neurobiology, reviewed by Julie Martineau
Marion Hall & David Robinson
The Human Brain (CD-ROM), reviewed by Julie Martineau
Laura Sewall
Sight and Sensibility, reviewed by Greg Nixon
Jonathan Crary
Suspensions of Perception, reviewed by Amy Ione
Kate M. Loewenthal
The Psychology of Religion, reviewed by Gary Schouborg
John Symons
On Dennett, reviewed by J. Teixeira & F. Magalhães
Ronald Russell
The Vast Enquiring Soul, reviewed by Imants Barûss

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Books received
Conferences and Meetings

ABSTRACTS

Benny Shanon

Altered Temporality

Temporality is a fundamental determinant of human cognition. There are, however, states of mind in which people feel that temporality changes radically and perhaps even becomes irrelevant. Here I attempt a typology of the patterns of such non-ordinary temporal experiences. The discussion is based on a phenomenological study of the special state of consciousness induced by Ayahuasca, a powerful Amazonian psychoactive brew.

Correspondence: Benny Shanon, Department of Psychology, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.
Email: msshanon@mscc.huji.ac.il


Paul Marshall

Transforming the World Into Experience: An Idealist Experiment

Idealism tackles the mind–body problem by giving precedence to mind and relegating matter to a dependent status. Contrary to popular opinion, idealism need not deny the existence of matter nor dispute the realist contention that objects exist independently of perceptual experience. However, idealism requires that matter and external objects are experiential or mind-dependent in a fundamental way. I develop a form of idealism that affirms the existence of an external world, but makes it experiential. The characteristics of the external experience are taken to be akin to those of perceptual experience, but attention is given to some likely differences. An attempt to accommodate modern physics in the experiential account yields an idealism with panpsychic features.

Correspondence: Paul Marshall, Dept. of Religious Studies, Lancaster University, Lancaster LA1 4YW, U.K.
Email: p.d.marshall@lancaster.ac.uk



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