Abstract is missing.
- New Developments in the Philosophy of AIVincent C. Müller. 1-4 [doi]
- Rationality and Intelligence: A Brief UpdateStuart Russell. 7-28 [doi]
- Computation and Multiple RealizabilityMarcin Milkowski. 29-41 [doi]
- When Thinking Never Comes to a Halt: Using Formal Methods in Making Sure Your AI Gets the Job Done Good EnoughTarek R. Besold, Robert Robere. 43-62 [doi]
- Machine Intelligence and the Ethical Grammar of ComputabilityDavid Leslie. 63-78 [doi]
- Is There a Role for Computation in the Enactive Paradigm?Carlos F. Brito, Victor X. Marques. 79-94 [doi]
- Natural Recursion Doesn't Work That Way: Automata in Planning and SyntaxCem Bozsahin. 95-112 [doi]
- AI, Quantum Information, and External Semantic Realism: Searle's Observer-Relativity and Chinese Room, RevisitedYoshihiro Maruyama. 115-127 [doi]
- Semantic Information and Artificial IntelligenceAnderson Beraldo De Araújo. 129-140 [doi]
- Information, Computation, Cognition. Agency-Based Hierarchies of LevelsGordana Dodig-Crnkovic. 141-159 [doi]
- From Simple Machines to Eureka in Four Not-So-Easy Steps: Towards Creative Visuospatial IntelligenceAna-Maria Olteteanu. 161-182 [doi]
- Leibniz's Art of Infallibility, Watson, and the Philosophy, Theory, and Future of AISelmer Bringsjord, Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu. 185-202 [doi]
- The Computational Theory of CognitionGualtiero Piccinini. 203-221 [doi]
- Representational Development Need Not Be Explicable-By-ContentNicholas Shea. 223-240 [doi]
- Toward a Theory of Intelligent Complex Systems: From Symbolic AI to Embodied and Evolutionary AIKlaus Mainzer. 241-259 [doi]
- The Anticipatory Brain: Two ApproachesMark H. Bickhard. 261-283 [doi]
- General Homeostasis, Passive Life, and the Challenge to AutonomyStefano Franchi. 285-300 [doi]
- Ad Hoc Hypotheses and the Monsters WithinIoannis Votsis. 301-315 [doi]
- Arguably Argumentative: A Formal Approach to the Argumentative Theory of ReasonSjur K. Dyrkolbotn, Truls Pedersen. 317-339 [doi]
- Explaining EverythingDavid Davenport. 341-354 [doi]
- Why Emotions Do Not Solve the Frame ProblemMadeleine Ransom. 355-367 [doi]
- HeX and the Single Anthill: Playing Games with Aunt HillaryJ. Mark Bishop, Slawomir J. Nasuto, T. Tanay, Etienne B. Roesch, Matthew C. Spencer. 369-390 [doi]
- Computer Models of Constitutive Social PracticeRichard Prideaux Evans. 391-411 [doi]
- Artificial Intelligence: The Point of View of Developmental RoboticsJean-Christophe Baillie. 415-424 [doi]
- Tacit Representations and Artificial Intelligence: Hidden Lessons from an Embodied Perspective on CognitionElena Spitzer. 425-441 [doi]
- Machine Art or Machine Artists?: Dennett, Danto, and the Expressive StanceAdam Linson. 443-458 [doi]
- Perception, Action and the Notion of GroundingAlexandros Tillas, Gottfried Vosgerau. 459-478 [doi]
- The Seminal Speculation of a Precursor: Elements of Embodied Cognition and Situated AI in Alan TuringMassimiliano L. Cappuccio. 479-496 [doi]
- Heideggerian AI and the Being of RobotsCarlos Herrera Pérez, Ricardo Sanz. 497-513 [doi]
- The Need for Moral Competency in Autonomous Agent ArchitecturesMatthias Scheutz. 517-527 [doi]
- Order Effects, Moral Cognition, and IntelligenceMarcello Guarini, Jordan Benko. 529-542 [doi]
- Artificial Intelligence and Responsible InnovationMiles Brundage. 543-554 [doi]
- Future Progress in Artificial Intelligence: A Survey of Expert OpinionVincent C. Müller, Nick Bostrom. 555-572 [doi]