Notes

  1. A. J. Bahm, Ethics as a Behavioral Science (Springfield, Ill.: Charles C. Thomas, 1974); Ralph Wendell Burhoe, “Values via Science,” Zygon 4 1969): 65–99; R. B. Cattell, A New Morality from Science: Beyondism (New York: Pergamon Press, 1972); Clyde Kluckhohn, “The Scientific Study of Values and Contemporary Civilization,” Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 102(1959): 469–76 (reprinted in Zygon 1 [1966]: 230–43); R. W. Sperry, “Science and the Problem of Values,” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 16 (1972): 115–30 (reprinted in Zygon 9 [1974]: 7–21).
  2. Garrett Hardin, Exploring New Ethics for Survival (New York: Viking Press, 1972).
  3. Theodore Roszak, Where the Wasteland Ends: Politics and Transcendence in Post‐industrial Society (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Co., 1973); Edward J. Mishan, The Costs of Economic Growth (New York: Frederick A. Praeger, Inc., 1967).
  4. Sperry.
  5. . R. W.Sperry, “A Modified Concept of Consciousness,” Psychological Review  76 (1969):532–36, and “Changing Concepts of Consciousness and Free Will,” Perspectives in Biology and Medicine  20 (1976):9–19.
  6. . R. W.Sperry, “An Objective Approach to Subjective Experience,” Psychological Review  77 (1970):585–90;idem, “Mental Phenomena as Causal Determinants in Brain Function,” Process Studies  5 (1976):247–56; idem, “Changing Concepts;” idem, “Fore‐brain Commissurotomy and Conscious Awareness,” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy  2 (1977):1–21.
  7. . Kurt Koffka, Principles of Gestalt Psychology (New York: Harcourt Brace & Co., 1935); Wolfgang Kohler, Gestalt Psychology (New York: H. Liveright, 1929); W. Köhler and R. Held,“The Cortical Correlates of Pattern Vision,” Science 110 (1949): 414–19. See also Edwin G. Boring, Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology (New York: D. Appleton‐Century Co., 1942).
  8. . R. W.Sperry, “Neurology and the Mind‐Brain Problem,” American Scientist  40 (1952):291–311.
  9. E. Pols,“Power and Agency,” International Philosophical Quarterly 11 (1971); 293–313, and Meditation on a Prisoner (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1975).
  10. . R. W.Sperry, “Mind, Brain and Humanist Values,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists  22 (1966):2–6 ;idem, “Forebrain” (n. 6 above).
  11. W. T. Wann, ed., Behaviorism and Phenomenology: Contrasting Bases for Modem Psychology (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1965).
  12. Roszak (n. 3 above).
  13. R. W. Sperry, Problems Outstanding in the Evolution of Brain Function (New York: American Museum of Natural History, 1964); idem, “Mind, Brain and Humanist Values” idem, “Changing Concepts” (n. 5 above).
  14. R. W. Doty, “Consciousness from Neurons,” Acta Neurobiologiae Experimental 35 (1975); 791–804; John C. Eccles, The Understanding of the Brain (New York: McGraw‐Hill Book Co., 1973); B. Libet, “Electrical Stimulation of Cortex in Human Subjects and Conscious Sensory Aspects,” in Handbook of Sensory Physiology, vol. 2, ed. A. Iggo (New York: Springer‐Verlag, 1973).
  15. Bahm (n. 1 above); George Edgin Pugh, The Biological Origin of Human Values (New York: Basic Books, 1977); Sperry,“Science and the Problem of Values”(n. 1 above).
  16. Sperry, “Mind, Brain and Humanist Values” andScience and the Problem of Values  .
  17. Pugh.
  18. Theodosius Dobzhansky, The Biology of Ultimate Concern (New York: New American Library, 1967).
  19. Sperry,“Science and the Problem of Values.”
  20. . Ralph WendellBurhoe, “The Human Prospect and the ‘Lord of History,’Zygon  10 (1975):299–375.