Causality in the Sciences of Mind and Brain
Special issue of Minds and Machines (Springer)
This special issue of Minds and Machines presents new and original work on the issue of causality in the sciences of the mind and brain. The topic of causality in the sciences is a vibrant research topic in philosophy that has received extensive attention, especially in recent years. The philosophical literature on causality in the sciences has seen a burst in productivity, offering innovative and highly nuanced concepts and approaches. The idea for this special issue, as well as many of the papers that we include, have been developed at the Causality in the Sciences Conference: Causality in the Sciences of the Mind and Brain, Aarhus June 2016.
Assistant Professor Lise Marie Andersen, IMC is the corresponding author of this special issue, link here
- Causality in the Sciences of the Mind and Brain
- Intervention and Identifiability in Latent Variable Modelling
- Discovering Brain Mechanisms Using Network Analysis and Causal Modeling
- Rethinking Causality in Biological and Neural Mechanisms: Constraints and Control
- Reduction Without Elimination: Mental Disorders as Causally Efficacious Properties
- Intervening on the Causal Exclusion Problem for Integrated Information Theory
- Interaction-Dominant Causation in Mind and Brain, and Its Implication for Questions of Generalization and Replication
Contact:
Assistant Professor Lise Marie Andersen, IMC