165 | -- | 181 | Nir Fresco. Explaining Computation Without Semantics: Keeping it Simple |
183 | -- | 202 | Matteo Colombo. How "Authentic Intentionality" can be Enabled: a Neurocomputational Hypothesis |
203 | -- | 212 | Achim G. Hoffmann. Can Machines Think? An Old Question Reformulated |
213 | -- | 241 | Pauli Brattico. Recursion Hypothesis Considered as a Research Program for Cognitive Science |
243 | -- | 257 | Mariarosaria Taddeo. Modelling Trust in Artificial Agents, A First Step Toward the Analysis of e-Trust |
259 | -- | 275 | Nathan Berg, Ulrich Hoffrage. Compressed Environments: Unbounded Optimizers Should Sometimes Ignore Information |
277 | -- | 289 | Jan De Winter. Explanations in Software Engineering: The Pragmatic Point of View |
291 | -- | 301 | David Corfield. Varieties of Justification in Machine Learning |
303 | -- | 309 | Blake H. Dournaee. Comments on "The Replication of the Hard Problem of Consciousness in AI and Bio-AI" |
311 | -- | 315 | Giuseppe Primiero. Charles Parsons: Mathematical Thought and its Objects - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge MA, 2008, xx+378, $50.00, ISBN 9780521452793 (hardback) |
317 | -- | 320 | David Fajardo-Chica. Grahek Nikola: Feeling Pain and Being in Pain, 2nd ed - The MIT Press, Cambridge, 2007, xi+181, $32.00, ISBN 0262072831 |
321 | -- | 324 | Jason Ford. Robert Kirk: Zombies and Consciousness - Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2007, xii+235, $45, ISBN 978-0-19-922980-2 |
325 | -- | 326 | Bradford McCall. David Braddon-Mitchell, Robert Nola (eds): Conceptual Analysis and Philosophical Naturalism - The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2009, viii+370, $38.00, ISBN 0-262-51228-9 |