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Last update:
2 September 2010

© John Benjamins
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Consciousness Emerging

The dynamics of perception, imagination, action, memory, thought, and language

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Renate Bartsch
University of Amsterdam

2002. x, 258 pp.
Publishing status: Available

PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 5159 6 / EUR 68.00
978 1 58811 180 7 / USD 102.00
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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9787 7 / EUR 68.00 / USD 102.00
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This study of the workings of neural networks in perception and understanding of situations and simple sentences shows that, and how, distributed conceptual constituents are bound together in episodes within an interactive/dynamic architecture of sensorial and pre-motor maps, and maps of conceptual indicators (semantic memory) and individuating indicators (historical, episodic memory). Activation circuits between these maps make sensorial and pre-motor fields in the brain function as episodic maps creating representations, which are expressions in consciousness. It is argued that all consciousness is episodic, consisting of situational or linguistic representations, and that the mind is the whole of all conscious manifestations of the brain. Thought occurs only in the form of linguistic or image representations. The book also discusses the role of consciousness in the relationship between causal and denotational semantics, and its role for the possibility of representations and rules. Four recent controversies in consciousness research are discussed and decided along this model of consciousness:
  • Is consciousness an internal or external monitoring device of brain states?
  • Do all conscious states involve thought and judgement?
  • Are there different kinds of consciousness?
  • Do we have a one-on-one correspondence between certain brain states and conscious states.
The book discusses also the role of consciousness in the relationship between causal and denotational semantics, and its role for the possibility of representations and rules. (Series A)


Table of contents

Preface
vii–ix
1. Consciousness and intentionality in perception, semantics, representations, and rules
1–74
2. Formal constraints on the relationship between understanding and Connectionist Neural Networks
75–127
3. An architecture of episodic and conceptual maps for understanding basic sentences and situations
129–164
4. Evaluation, thought, imagery, and language
165–186
5. Controversial issues in consciousness research
187–236
Conclusion
237–241
References
243–247
Index
249–256


The overall structure of the book is very clear, taking the reader from a foundational philosophical argumentation to a detailed conceptual - yet not too technical - description of the workings of the account, before it finally deals with some interesting theoretical implications thereof.
Daniel Wiechmann,Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany, in ICLA-review, February 2008