Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Hallucination

View through CrossRef
Scientific and philosophical perspectives on hallucination: essays that draw on empirical evidence from psychology, neuroscience, and cutting-edge philosophical theory. Reflection on the nature of hallucination has relevance for many traditional philosophical debates concerning the nature of the mind, perception, and our knowledge of the world. In recent years, neuroimaging techniques and scientific findings on the nature of hallucination, combined with interest in new philosophical theories of perception such as disjunctivism, have brought the topic of hallucination once more to the forefront of philosophical thinking. Scientific evidence from psychology, neuroscience, and psychiatry sheds light on the functional role and physiology of actual hallucinations; some disjunctivist theories offer a radically new and different philosophical conception of hallucination. This volume offers interdisciplinary perspectives on the nature of hallucination, offering essays by both scientists and philosophers. Contributors first consider topics from psychology and neuroscience, including neurobiological mechanisms of hallucination and the nature and phenomenology of auditory-verbal hallucinations. Philosophical discussions follow, with contributors first considering disjunctivism and then, more generally, the relation between hallucination and the nature of experience. Contributors István Aranyosi, Richard P. Bentall, Paul Coates, Fabian Dorsch, Katalin Farkas, Charles Fernyhough, Dominic H. ffytche, Benj Hellie, Matthew Kennedy, Fiona Macpherson, Ksenija Maravic da Silva, Peter Naish, Simon McCarthy-Jones, Matthew Nudds, Costas Pagondiotis, Ian Phillips, Dimitris Platchias, Howard Robinson, Susanna Schellenberg, Filippo Varese
The MIT Press
Title: Hallucination
Description:
Scientific and philosophical perspectives on hallucination: essays that draw on empirical evidence from psychology, neuroscience, and cutting-edge philosophical theory.
Reflection on the nature of hallucination has relevance for many traditional philosophical debates concerning the nature of the mind, perception, and our knowledge of the world.
In recent years, neuroimaging techniques and scientific findings on the nature of hallucination, combined with interest in new philosophical theories of perception such as disjunctivism, have brought the topic of hallucination once more to the forefront of philosophical thinking.
Scientific evidence from psychology, neuroscience, and psychiatry sheds light on the functional role and physiology of actual hallucinations; some disjunctivist theories offer a radically new and different philosophical conception of hallucination.
This volume offers interdisciplinary perspectives on the nature of hallucination, offering essays by both scientists and philosophers.
Contributors first consider topics from psychology and neuroscience, including neurobiological mechanisms of hallucination and the nature and phenomenology of auditory-verbal hallucinations.
Philosophical discussions follow, with contributors first considering disjunctivism and then, more generally, the relation between hallucination and the nature of experience.
Contributors István Aranyosi, Richard P.
Bentall, Paul Coates, Fabian Dorsch, Katalin Farkas, Charles Fernyhough, Dominic H.
ffytche, Benj Hellie, Matthew Kennedy, Fiona Macpherson, Ksenija Maravic da Silva, Peter Naish, Simon McCarthy-Jones, Matthew Nudds, Costas Pagondiotis, Ian Phillips, Dimitris Platchias, Howard Robinson, Susanna Schellenberg, Filippo Varese.

Related Results

Unresolved Psychological Problem in Dennis Lehane’s Shutter Island
Unresolved Psychological Problem in Dennis Lehane’s Shutter Island
This article explains hallucination as a psychological problem undergone by Andrew Laeddis, the main character of Dennis Lehane’s Shutter Island. Viewed from Sigmund Freud’s psycho...
GERIATRIC EVALUATION IN 27 CASES OF MUSICAL HALLUCINATION
GERIATRIC EVALUATION IN 27 CASES OF MUSICAL HALLUCINATION
Background: Musical hallucination (AM) is a type of complex auditory hallucination described as hearing musical tones, rhythms, harmonies, and melodies without the corresponding ex...
L'illusion d'absence.
L'illusion d'absence.
Résumé Freud, à la suite de Bernheim, a parlé d'hallucination négative dès 1890, les exemples qu'il en a donnés sont aussi bien personnels que ceux de patients, dont l'Homme aux lo...
Exploring the determinants and effects of artificial intelligence (AI) hallucination exposure on generative AI adoption in healthcare
Exploring the determinants and effects of artificial intelligence (AI) hallucination exposure on generative AI adoption in healthcare
Artificial intelligence (AI) hallucinations—erroneous outputs that generate misleading or nonsensical content—pose significant risks in contexts where consumers seek health informa...
Zero-resource Hallucination Detection for Text Generation via Graph-based Contextual Knowledge Triples Modeling
Zero-resource Hallucination Detection for Text Generation via Graph-based Contextual Knowledge Triples Modeling
LLMs obtain remarkable performance but suffer from hallucinations. Most research on detecting hallucination focuses on questions with short and concrete correct answers that are ea...
Penerapan Terapi Musik Klasik pada Pasien Halusinasi Pendengaran
Penerapan Terapi Musik Klasik pada Pasien Halusinasi Pendengaran
Hallucinations are one of the mental disorders   where patients experience sensory perception disorders, feeling false sensations in the form of sounds, touch, sight, and smell. Th...
Hubungan Dukungan Keluarga Dengan Proses Pemulihan Pasien Halusinasi
Hubungan Dukungan Keluarga Dengan Proses Pemulihan Pasien Halusinasi
Hallucinations are one of the symptoms of mental disorders where patients experience changes in sensory perception, feeling false sensations in the form of sound, sight, taste, tou...
Providing Spiritual Dhikr Therapy to Patients with Sensory Perception Disorders and Auditory Hallucinations
Providing Spiritual Dhikr Therapy to Patients with Sensory Perception Disorders and Auditory Hallucinations
Hallucinations could cause someone to be unable to distinguish between what was real and what was merely an illusion. During hallucinations, the client could react with suspicion, ...

Back to Top