1 | -- | 0 | James H. Fetzer. Editor's Note |
3 | -- | 27 | Selmer Bringsjord, Paul Bello, David A. Ferrucci. Creativity, the Turing Test, and the (Better) Lovelace Test |
29 | -- | 39 | Gerald J. Erion. The Cartesian Test for Automatism |
41 | -- | 51 | Larry Hauser. Look Who's Moving the Goal Posts Now |
53 | -- | 76 | Sean Zdenek. Passing Loebner's Turing Test: A Case of Conflicting Discourse Functions |
77 | -- | 93 | James H. Moor. The Status and Future of the Turing Test |
95 | -- | 99 | Selmer Bringsjord. In Computation, Parallel is Nothing, Physical Everything |
101 | -- | 111 | Robert M. French, Elizabeth Thomas. The Dynamical Hypothesis in Cognitive Science: A Review Essay of Mind As Motion |
113 | -- | 126 | Thomas W. Polger, Owen Flanagan. A Decade of Teleofunctionalism: Lycan's Consciousness and Consciousness and Experience |
127 | -- | 132 | William G. Lycan. Response to Polger and Flanagan |
133 | -- | 137 | Nicholas P. Power. The Origins of Self-Consciousness |
139 | -- | 142 | José Luis Bermúdez. Bodily Self-Awareness and the Will: Reply to Power |
143 | -- | 147 | Peter M. Asaro. Hans Moravec, Robot. Mere Machine to Transcendent Mind, New York, NY: Oxford University Press, Inc., 1999, ix + 227 pp., $25.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-19-511630-5 |
148 | -- | 150 | Istvan S. N. Berkeley. Peter Novak, Mental Symbols: A Defence of the Classical Theory of Mind. Studies in Cognitive Systems 19, Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1997, xxii + 266 pp., $114.00, ISBN 0-7923-4370-0 |
151 | -- | 154 | J. W. Sanders. Luciano Floridi, Philosophy and Computing: An introduction, London and New York: Routledge, 1999, xiv+242 pp., ISBN 0-415-18025-2 |