Category: Issue

Volume 24, Number 2, Spring

Altered States and the Study of Consciousness — The Case of Ayahuasca  Benny Shanon, The Hebrew University The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Spring 2003, Volume 24, Number 2, Pages

Volume 24, Number 1, Winter

The Case for Intrinsic Theory: VII. An Equivocal Remembrance Theory Thomas Natsoulas, University of California, Davis The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 2003, Volume 24, Number 1, Pages 1–28,

Vol. 23, Number 4, Autumn

Missing the Experiential Presence of Environmental Objects: A Construal of Immediate Sensible Representations as Conceptual Thomas Natsoulas, University of California, Davis The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Autumn 2002, Volume

Vol. 23, Number 3, Summer

Intertheoretic Identification and Mind-Brain Reductionism Mark Crooks, Michigan State University The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 2002, Volume 23, Number 3, Pages 193–222, ISSN 0271–0137 A recurrent candidate for

Volume 22, Number 4, Autumn

Metaphor and Consciousness: The Path Less Taken Joseph Glicksohn, Bar-Ilan University The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Autumn 2001, Volume 22, Number 4, Pages 343–364, ISSN 0271–0137 In attempting to

Volume 22, Number 3, Summer

On the Intrinsic Nature of States of Consciousness: Attempted Inroads from the First-Person Perspective Thomas Natsoulas, University of California, Davis The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Summer 2001, Volume 22,

Volume 22, Number 2, Spring

The Split-Brain Debate Revisited: On the Importance of Language and Self-Recognition for Right Hemispheric Consciousness Alain Morin, Ste-Foy, Québec, Canada The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Spring 2001, Volume 22,

Volume 22, Number 1, Winter

Epistemic Unification Mitchell R. Haney, Missouri Western State College Herman E. Stark, South Suburban College The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Winter 2001, Volume 22, Number 1, Pages 1–22, ISSN

Volume 21, Number 4, Autumn

Consciousness and Conscience Thomas Natsoulas, University of California, Davis The Journal of Mind and Behavior, Autumn 2000, Volume 21, Number 4, Pages 327–352, ISSN 0271–0137 The “intrapersonal together sense” is