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Palgrave Macmillan
Keeping the pragmatism in neuropragmatism
Mark Johnson
Introspection through cognition
Jesse Butler
Hume
Anne J. Jacobson
Introduction
Michelle Maiese
Understanding our own beliefs and desires
Ideas, language and skepticism
Concepts
The essential embodiment thesis
The internal monologue
Thought
Essentially embodied, desire-based emotions
On the social side of self-knowledge
Vision
Sense of self, embodiment, and desire-based emotions
Conclusion
Actions, emotions and beliefs, part I
The role of emotion in decision and moral evaluation
The end of the debate over extended cognition
Jeffrey B. Wagman, Anthony Chemero
Actions, emotions and beliefs, part II
Essentially embodied, emotive, enactive social cognition
Knowing and the known
David D. Franks
Breakdowns in embodied emotive cognition
Neuropragmatism and apprenticeship
Bill Bywater, Zachary Piso
A neuropragmatist framework for childhood education
Alireza Moula, Antony J. Puddephatt, Simin Mohseni
Finding unapparent connections
Robert Arp
Concluding remarks
Pragmatism and the contribution of neuroscience to ethics
Eric Racine
Neuropragmatism and the reconstruction of scientific and humanistic worldviews
John Shook, Tibor Solymosi
Dewey's rejection of the emotion/ expression distinction
Tibor Solymosi, John Shook
Pragmatist ethics
Markate Daly
How computational neuroscience revealed that the pragmatists were right
Teed Rockwell
Moral first aid for a neuroscientific age
Tibor Solymosi
Pragmatism, cognitive capacity and brain function
Jay Schulkin
Introspection as inner perception
Poking out the inner eye
Regarding representations
Introspection as a metaphor
From fodorian to Aristotelian representations
Knowing our own consciousness
Aristotelian representations II
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