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Attention has been studied in cognitive psychology for more than
half a century, but until recently it was largely neglected in
philosophy. Now, philosophers of mind increasingly recognize that
attention has an important role to play in our theories of
consciousness and of cognition. At the same time, several recent
developments in psychology have led psychologists to foundational
questions about the nature of attention and its implementation in
the brain. As a result there has been a convergence of interest in
fundamental questions about attention. This volume presents the
latest thinking from the philosophers and psychologists who are
working at the interface between these two disciplines. Its
fourteen chapters contain detailed philosophical and scientific
arguments about the nature and mechanisms of attention; the
relationship between attention and consciousness; the role of
attention in explaining reference, rational thought, and the
control of action; the fundamental metaphysical status of
attention, and the details of its implementation in the brain.
These contributions combine ideas from phenomenology, neuroscience,
cognitive psychology and philosophy of mind to further our
understanding of this centrally important mental phenomenon, and to
bring to light the foundational questions that any satisfactory
theory of attention will need to address.
This book identifies "development-oriented poverty reduction" as a
crucial part of what is now often billed as China's unique
development path, experience and model. China's success serves as
an example for any society aiming to eradicate poverty. However,
there is still a tough road ahead as the country enters a new phase
of the war on poverty. In addition to a systematic overview of the
country's development-oriented poverty reduction experiences over
recent decades, the book also offers an outlook for poverty
reduction in the coming years, including challenges the country
will face as it enters the final stretch in the race to achieve
moderate prosperity for all. It also discusses policy options for
meeting the government's poverty-reduction targets by 2020 within
the precision-targeting strategy framework.
This book identifies “development-oriented poverty reduction”
as a crucial part of what is now often billed as China’s unique
development path, experience and model. China’s success serves as
an example for any society aiming to eradicate poverty. However,
there is still a tough road ahead as the country enters a new phase
of the war on poverty. In addition to a systematic overview of the
country’s development-oriented poverty reduction experiences over
recent decades, the book also offers an outlook for poverty
reduction in the coming years, including challenges the country
will face as it enters the final stretch in the race to achieve
moderate prosperity for all. It also discusses policy options for
meeting the government’s poverty-reduction targets by 2020 within
the precision-targeting strategy framework.
Movements of the Mind is about what it is to be an agent. Focusing
on mental agency, it integrates multiple approaches, from
philosophical analysis of the metaphysics of agency to the activity
of neurons in the brain. Philosophical and empirical work are
combined to generate concrete explanations of key features of the
mind. The book should be relevant and accessible to philosophers
and scientists interested in mind and agency. Wu argues that
actions have a core psychological structure where attention plays a
necessary role in guiding the agent's response and intentions
function as memory for work, a practical memory. Attention and
memory are accordingly central parts of an agent's intentionally
doing things. These claims are supported by synthesizing
philosophical and empirical work to produce a theory of intention
and attention in action. The account explains three phenomena of
current philosophical interest: (a) the basis of positively and
negatively biased action where attention often leads to implicit
bias, (b) the dynamics of deductive reasoning as the focusing of a
thinker's cognitive attention and the development of cognitive
skills, and (c) the psychology of introspective access to conscious
perceptual experience, making clear when introspection can
intelligibly fail and when it can succeed. The book provides a
theory of agency, whether human or non-human, along with technical
notions of automaticity and control, a theory of attention as
selection to guide behavior, an account of intention as memory
whose dynamics are revealed in empirical investigation of working
memory, explications of sustained attention and vigilance, an
explanation of biased behavior driven by biases on attention,
normative aspects of attention as a skill, the role of learning in
cognitive skill, a theory of deduction as a sharpening of
attention, and a psychologically plausible model of introspection
that speaks to its accuracy and reliability.
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