105 | -- | 107 | Germain Poizat. Editorial: Introduction to the special issue on the course-of-experience framework |
109 | -- | 125 | Germain Poizat, Simon Flandin, Jacques Theureau. A micro-phenomenological and semiotic approach to cognition in practice: a path toward an integrative approach to studying cognition-in-the-world and from within |
127 | -- | 131 | Nicolás Alessandroni, Lambros Malafouris. Blurring ontological boundaries: The transactional nature of material engagement |
133 | -- | 136 | Simon Høffding. "What's done is done, the bullet's left the gun": Questions on the Application, Origin, and Metaphysics of the «Course-of-Experience Framework» |
137 | -- | 141 | Marek McGann. Connecting with the subject of our science: Course-of-experience research supports valid theory building in cognitive science |
143 | -- | 149 | Jonathan McKinney, Sune Vork Steffensen, Anthony Chemero. Practice, enactivism, and ecological psychology |
151 | -- | 155 | Letícia Renault. Exploring the notion of "from-within" through the concept of event |
157 | -- | 161 | Wolff-Michael Roth. From interaction to transaction: The primacy of movement and the event as irreducible unit |
163 | -- | 168 | Ludovic Seifert, Duarte Araújo, Keith Davids. Avoiding organismic asymmetries in ecological cognition: Analysis of agent-environment couplings with eco-physical variables |
169 | -- | 173 | Pierre Steiner. An aftertaste of Cartesian salad? Pre-reflective self-consciousness, Peirce, and the study of cognition in the wild |
175 | -- | 194 | Germain Poizat, Simon Flandin, Jacques Theureau. Author's reply to the commentaries: Clearing up misunderstandings about the course-of-experience framework and laying the groundwork for future discussions |