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In exploring whether our neuroscientific discoveries are consistent
with the idea we are voluntary agents, "Human Agency and Neural
Causes" presents a neuroscientifically-informed emergentist account
of human agency.
In contrast with the assumptions that currently shape
neuropsychological research on voluntary agency, J.D. Runyan
presents a broadly-conceived Aristotelian account of voluntary
agency grounded in our everyday thought about our conduct. In the
process, some new concerns are raised for compatibilist theories of
free will, as well as for reductive neuroscientific theory. This
book argues that what contemporary neuroscience reveals is along
the lines of what we should expect if we are, in fact, voluntary
agents. At the same time, upholding the idea that we are voluntary
agents will require profound and controversial changes in the way
we interpret our neuroscientific findings.
German U-boats, known as "iron coffins", terrorized Allied ships
during World War II and were responsible for thousands of deaths.
This volume, published to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the
Battle of the Atlantic, brings together historians from both sides
of the ocean to discuss this important campaign. As well as
offering new insights into both familiar and more neglected
aspects, the book reflects the human dimension of the conflict,
paying tribute to the whole spectrum of personnel involved -
planners and strategists, spies and code-breakers, naval officers
and crews, merchant sailors, and civilians.
German U-boats, known as "iron coffins", terrorized Allied ships
during World War II and were responsible for thousands of deaths.
This volume, published to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the
Battle of the Atlantic, brings together historians from both sides
of the ocean to discuss this important campaign. As well as
offering new insights into both familiar and more neglected
aspects, the book reflects the human dimension of the conflict,
paying tribute to the whole spectrum of personnel involved -
planners and strategists, spies and code-breakers, naval officers
and crews, merchant sailors, and civilians.
Human Agency and Neural Causes provides an analysis of our everyday
thought about our conduct, and the neuroscience research concerning
voluntary agency. J.D. Runyan argues that our findings through
neuroscience are consistent with what would be expected if we are,
in fact, voluntary agents.
This first general survey of European naval and maritime history
for the period from A.D. 300 to 1500 focuses on Western Europe,
including the Baltic, North Sea, and Atlantic traditions, and on
the Mediterranean, particularly Byzantine and Moslem naval history.
The authors survey a number of interconnected areas: the use of
seapower in international and intercultural relations, commerce and
trade routes, naval technology and design, military tactics, the
physical features of seafaring, and the geography of the sea. They
make accessible to the general reader very technical scholarship,
and provide numerous maps and illustrations that explain the
changes in ship design and construction. The overall result is a
powerful historical synthesis whiich gives students, teachers, and
general readers a "feel" for the seafaring life and the place of
the sea within medieval civilization.
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