A Skeptic's Bookshelf
Stephen E. Braude
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Stephen Braude is professor of philosophy and
chairman of the philosophy department at the University of Maryland
Baltimore County. After publishing a number of articles in the
philosophy of language, temporal logic, and the philosophy of time,
he turned his attention to several related problems in the
philosophy of science and the philosophy of mind—in particular,
questions concerning causality, scientific explanation generally,
and psychological explanation specifically. Along the way, he
examined the evidence of parapsychology to see whether it would
provide new insights into these and other traditional philosophical
issues. After that, he shifted his focus to problems in
philosophical psychopathology, writing extensively on the
connections between dissociation and classic philosophical problems
as well as central issues in parapsychology—for example, the unity
of consciousness, multiple personality and moral responsibility, and
the nature of mental mediumship. He is past president of the
Parapsychological Association and the recipient of several grants
and fellowships, including research fellowships from the National
Endowment for the Humanities and the BIAL Foundation. He has
published more than fifty philosophical essays, and four books.:
ESP and Psychokinesis: A Philosophical Examination (2002), The
Limits of Influence: Psychokinesis and the Philosophy of Science
(1997), First Person Plural: Multiple Personality and the Philosophy
of Mind (1995) and Immortal Remains: The Evidence for Life
After Death (2003). He is also a professional pianist and composer
and a prize-winning stereo photographer. Website: http://userpages.umbc.edu/~braude More
on Stephen
E. Braude |
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Immortal Remains: The Evidence for Life
After Death by Stephen E. Braude Release
date June 2003 (USA)
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Remains Today!
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ESP and Psychokinesis: A Philosophical
Examination by Stephen Braude This work
was the first sustained philosophical study of psychic phenomena to
follow C.D. Broad's Lectures on Psychical Research, written
nearly twenty years earlier. The author clearly defines the
categories of psychic phenomena, surveys the most compelling
experimental data, and traces their implications for the philosophy
of science and the philosophy of mind. He considers carefully the
abstract presuppositions underlying leading theories of psychic
phenomena, and he offers bold criticisms of both mechanistic
analyses of communication and psychophysical identity theories. In
addition, he challenges the received view that experimental
repeatability is the paramount criterion for evaluating
parapsychological research, and he exposes the deep confusions
underlying Jung's concept of synchronicity.
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and Psychokinesis Today!
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and Psychokinesis Today!
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The Limits of Influence: Psychokinesis
and the Philosophy of Science by Stephen Braude
The Limits of Influence is a detailed examination
and defense of the evidence for largescale-psychokinesis (PK). It
examines the reasons why experimental evidence has not, and perhaps
cannot, convince most skeptics that PK is genuine, and it considers
why traditional experimental procedures are important to reveal
interesting facts about the phenomena. It then examines why PK does
not pose a clear threat to the very fabric of science, and many have
supposed. The major skeptical challenges to taking large-scale PK
seriously and the reason why those challenges are all unsatisfactory
are considered. The evidence examined most closely is the
turn-of-the-century evidence for physical mediumship, with special
attention given to the cases of D.D. Home and Eusapio Palladino. The
author compares and evaluates the leading theories of apparitions
and considers the extent to which the evidence for collective
apparitions can be interpreted as a further type of psychokinetic
phenomenon. Finally, the claim that PK (and psychic functioning
generally) might occur in refined and extensive forms is considered.
It argues that this claim is not as outlandish as many have
maintained and that we might have to accept something like the
"magical" world view associated with so-called "primitive"
societies.
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Limits of Influence Today!
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Limits of Infuluence Today!
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First Person Plural: Multiple Personality
and the Philosophy of Mind by Stephen Braude
Do people with multiple "personalities" have more
than one "self"? The first full-length philosophical study of
multiple personality disorder, "First Person Plural" maintains that
even the deeply divided multiple personality contains an underlying
psychological unity. Braude updates his work in this revised edition
to discuss recent empirical and conceptual developments, including
the charge that clinicians induce false memories in their patients,
and the professional redefinition of "multiple personality disorder"
as "dissociative identity disorder."
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Person Plural Today!
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Person Plural Today!
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