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For the Casual Surfer, A 
        Brief Bio:Stephen E. Braude is Professor of Philosophy 
        and Chairman of the Philosophy Department at the University of Maryland 
        Baltimore County.  He studied philosophy and English at 
        Oberlin College and the University of London, and in 1971 he received 
        his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. 
         After publishing a number of articles 
        in the philosophy of language, temporal logic, and the philosophy of time, 
        he turned his attention to the evidence of parapsychology to see whether 
        it would provide new insights into old problems in the philosophy of science 
        and the philosophy of mind. He has also made a study of dissociation and 
        multiple personality, and he has written extensively on their connection 
        both to classic philosophical problems and to central problems in parapsychology. 
         Prof. Braude 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 in Lisbon. He has published 
        more than 50 philosophical essays in such journals as Noûs, The 
        Philosophical Review, Philosophical Studies, Analysis, 
        Inquiry, and Philosophia. Prof. Braude 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 in Lisbon. He has published 
        more than 50 philosophical essays in such journals as Noûs, The 
        Philosophical Review, Philosophical Studies, Analysis, 
        Inquiry, and Philosophia. Prof. Braude has written three books: 
        ESP and Psychokinesis: A Philosophical Examination 
        (Temple University Press, 1979), The Limits of Influence: Psychokinesis and the Philosophy of Science 
        (Routledge, 1986; revised edition, University Press of America, 1997), 
        and First Person Plural: Multiple Personality and the Philosophy of 
        Mind (Routledge, 1991; revised edition, Rowman & Littlefield, 
        1995).  Currently, he is completing a new book 
        on the evidence for life after death.  He is also a professional pianist and 
        composer, a prize-winning stereo photographer, and he has webbed feet. 
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