--Stephen E. Braude, University of Maryland at Baltimore County
" An admirable contribution... one that demonstrates the ways in which philosophy can inform the interdisciplinary study of consciousness." -- S. Krippner, Choice
" This book is philosophically subtle and thorough, empirically sophisticated, and sensitive to the complex phenomenology of both normal and abnormal experience." --Stephen E. Braude, University of Maryland at Baltimore County
& quot; An admirable contribution... one that demonstrates the ways in which philosophy can inform the interdisciplinary study of consciousness.& quot; -- S. Krippner, Choice
& quot; This book is philosophically subtle and thorough, empirically sophisticated, and sensitive to the complex phenomenology of both normal and abnormal experience.& quot; --Stephen E. Braude, University of Maryland at Baltimore County
"An admirable contribution... one that demonstrates the ways in which philosophy can inform the interdisciplinary study of consciousness."-- S. Krippner, "Choice"
"This book is philosophically subtle and thorough, empirically sophisticated, and sensitive to the complex phenomenology of both normal and abnormal experience."--Stephen E. Braude, University of Maryland at Baltimore County
"An admirable contribution...one that demonstrates the ways in which philosophy can inform the interdisciplinary study of consciousness." S. Krippner Choice
"An admirable contribution... one that demonstrates the ways in which philosophy can inform the interdisciplinary study of consciousness." S. Krippner Choice
G. Lynn Stephens is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. George Graham is a Professor of Philosophy and Neuroscience at Georgia State University in Atlanta, Georgia.