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Minds and Machines, Volume 1
Volume 1, Number 1, February 1991
- Michael Morris:
Why there are no mental representations. 1-30 - Robert Cummins:
Form, interpretation, and the uniqueness of content: Response to Morris. 31-42 - Stevan Harnad:
Other bodies, other minds: A machine incarnation of an old philosophical problem. 43-54 - Robert F. Hadley:
The many uses of 'belief' in AI. 55-73 - Clark Glymour:
The hierarchies of knowledge and the mathematics of discovery. 75-95 - Timothy R. Colburn:
Program verification, defeasible reasoning, and two views of computer science. 97-116 - Nicolas D. Goodman, Stephen W. Smoliar, Morton L. Schagrin:
Book reviews. 117-124
Volume 1, Number 2, May 1991
- Vinod Goel:
Notationality and the information processing mind. 129-165 - Hugh Clapin:
Connectionism isn't magic. 167-184 - Ron McClamrock:
Marr's three levels: A re-evaluation. 185-196 - James H. Fetzer:
Philosophical aspects of program verification. 197-216 - Paul Thagard:
In defense of computational philosophy of science. 217-219 - Charles Dunlop, Susan M. Haller, James Moor:
Book reviews. 221-232
Volume 1, Number 3, May 1991
- Jaap van Brakel:
Meaning, prototypes and the future of cognitive science. 233-257 - Beth Preston:
AI, anthropocentrism, and the evolution of 'intelligence'. 259-277 - Robert F. Hadley:
A sense-based, process model of belief. 279-320 - Michael V. Antony:
Fodor and Pylyshyn on connectionism. 321-341 - Kären Wieckert, Nino B. Cocchiarella, Jon Barwise:
Book reviews. 343-353
Volume 1, Number 4, November 1991
- Donald Nute:
Preface. 355-356 - Ronald Prescott Loui:
Argument and belief: Where we stand in the Keynesian tradition. 357-365 - John L. Pollock:
Self-defeating arguments. 367-392 - Steven O. Kimbrough, Hua Hua:
On nonmonotonic reasoning with the method of sweeping presumptions. 393-416 - Timothy R. Colburn:
Defeasible reasoning and logic programming. 417-436 - Robert L. Causey:
The epistemic basis of defeasible reasoning. 437-458
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