9. Bubbling Brooks and Personal Consciousness

  1.     James, Principles of Psychology, in Hutchins, Adler, and Brockway, Great Books of the Western World, vol. 53, William James, 149.

  2.     Matthew E. Roser et al., “Dissociating Processes Supporting Causal Perception and Causal Inference in the Brain,” Neuropsychology 19 (2005), 591.

  3.     Sherrington, Man on His Nature, 275.

  4.     Niels Kaj Jerne, “Antibodies and Learning: Selection versus Instruction,” in The Neurosciences: A Study Program, eds. Gardner C. Quarton, Theodore Melnechuk, and Francis O. Schmitt, pp. 200–205 (New York: Rockefeller University Press, 1967).

  5.     Alan M. Leslie and Stephanie Keeble, “Do Six-Month-Old Infants Perceive Causality?” Cognition 25 (1987), 265–88.

  6.     Thomas Nagel, “What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” Philosophical Review 83 (1974), 435–50.

  7.     Liane Young and Rebecca Saxe, “Innocent Intentions: A Correlation between Forgiveness for Accidental Harm and Neural Activity,” Neuropsychologia 47 (2009), 2065–72.

  8.     Michael B. Miller et al., “Abnormal Moral Reasoning in Complete and Partial Callosotomy Patients,” Neuropsychologia 48 (2010), 2215–20.

  9.     Neil Young documentary, part 2, retrieved August 27, 2016, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lslh6hG9EVQ.

  10.   Steven Pinker, How the Mind Works (New York: W. W. Norton, 1997), 133.

  11.   Jaak Panksepp and Lucy Biven, The Archaeology of Mind: Neuroevolutionary Origins of Human Emotions (New York: W. W. Norton, 2012).

  12.   Jaack Panksepp, “The Periconscious Substrates of Consciousness: Affective States and the Evolutionary Origins of the SELF,” Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (1998), 566–82.

  13.   Andrew R. Barron and Colin Klein, “What Insects Can Tell Us about the Origins of Consciousness,” PNAS 113 (2016), 4900–8.

  14.   Nicholas J. Strausfeld and Frank Hirth, “Deep Homology of Arthropod Central Complex and Vertebrate Basal Ganglia,” Science 340 (2013), 157–61.

  15.   Robert B. Barlow Jr. and Anthony J. Fraioli, “Inhibition in the Limulus Lateral Eye In Situ,” Journal of General Physiology 71 (1978), 699–720.

  16.   Shreesh P. Mysore and Eric I. Knudsen, “A Shared Inhibitory Circuit for Both Exogenous and Endogenous Control of Stimulus Selection,” Nature Neuroscience 16 (2013), 473–78.

  17.   Diane M. Beck and Sabine Kastner, “Top-down and Bottom-up Mechanisms in Biasing Competition in the Human Brain,” Vision Research 49 (2009), 1154–65.

  18.   Steven D. Wiederman and David C. O’Carroll, “Selective Attention in an Insect Visual Neuron,” Current Biology 23 (2013), 156–61.

  19.   Paul Buckley and F. David Peat, Glimpsing Reality: Ideas in Physics and the Link to Biology, rev. ed. (New York: Routledge, 2009), 134.

  20.   Bisiach and Luzzatti, “Unilateral Neglect of Representational Space.”

  21.   Denise Barbut and Michael S. Gazzaniga, “Disturbances in Conceptual Space Involving Language and Speech,” Brain 110 (1987), 1487–96.

  22.   Gary Taubes, Good Calories, Bad Calories: Fats, Carbs, and the Controversial Science of Diet and Health (New York: Anchor Books, 2007).