The Routledge Handbook of Consciousness

(vip2019) #1
Animal Consciousness

Block, N. (1995) “On a Confusion about the Function of Consciousness,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18:
227–247.
Block, N. (2002) “The Harder Problem of Consciousness,” The Journal of Philosophy 99: 391–425.
Boles, L. C. and Lohmann, K. J. (2003) “True Navigation and Magnetic Maps in Spiny Lobsters,” Nature
421: 60–63.
Braithwaite, V. A. and Huntingford, F. A. (2004) “Fish and Welfare: Do Fish Have the Capacity for Pain
Perception and Suffering? Animal Welfare 13: 87–92.
Broad, C. D. (1925) The Mind and Its Place in Nature, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
Brown, C. (2016) “Comparative Evolutionary Approach to Pain Perception in Fishes,” Animal Sentience
1(3): 5.
Buckner, C. (2011) “Two Approaches to the Distinction Between Cognition and Mere Association,”
International Journal for Comparative Psychology 24: 1–35.
Bugnyar, T. and Heinrich, B. (2005) “Ravens, Corvus Corax, Differentiate Between Knowledgeable and
Ignorant Competitors,” Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences 272: 1641–1646.
Burghardt, G. M. (1985) “Animal Awareness: Current Perceptions and Historical Perspective,” American
Psychologist 40: 905–919.
Burghardt, G. M. (1997) “Amending Tinbergen: A Fifth Aim for Ethology,” in R. W. Mitchell and H. L.
Miles (eds.) Anthropomorphism, Anecdotes, and Animals, Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Burghardt, G. M. and Bekoff, M. (2009) “Animal Consciousness,” in T. Bayne, A. Cleeremans and P. Wilken
(eds.) The Oxford Companion to Consciousness, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Bushnell, M. C., Duncan, G. H., Hofbauer, R. K., Ha, B., Chen, J. I. and Carrier, B. (1999) “Pain Perception:
Is There a Role for Primary Somatosensory Cortex?” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 96:
7705–7709.
Cabanac, M. (1999) “Emotion and Phylogeny,” Journal of Consciousness Studies 6(6–7): 176–190.
Cabanac, M., Cabanac, A. J. and Parent, A. (2009) “The Emergence of Consciousness in Phylogeny,”
Behavioural Brain Research 198: 267–272.
Calabrese, A. and Woolley, S. M. N. (2015) “Coding Principles of the Canonical Cortical Microcircuit in
the Avian Brain.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112: 3517–3522.
Call, J. (2004) “Inferences about the Location of Food in the Great Apes (Pan paniscus, Pan troglodytes,
Gorilla gorilla, and Pongo pygmaeus),” Journal of Comparative Psychology 118: 232–241.
Call, J. and Carpenter, M. (2001) “Do Apes and Children Know What They Have Seen?” Animal Cognition
3: 207–220.
Call, J. and Tomasello, M. (2008) “Does the Chimpanzee Have a Theory of Mind? 30 Years Later,” Trends in
Cognitive Sciences 12: 187–192.
Cannicci, S., Barelli, C. and Vannini, M. (2000) “Homing in the Swimming Crab Thalamita crenata:
A Mechanism Based on Underwater Landmark Memory,” Animal Behavior 60: 203–210.
Carruthers, P. (1989) “Brute Experience,” Journal of Philosophy 86: 258–269.
Carruthers, P. (1996) Language, Thought and Consciousness, Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press.
Carruthers, P. (2000) Phenomenal Consciousness: A Naturalistic Theory, Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University
Press.
Carruthers, P. (2005a) “Why the Question of Animal Consciousness Might Not Matter Very Much,”
Philosophical Psychology 18: 83–102.
Carruthers, P. (2005b) Consciousness: Essays From a Higher-Order Perspective, New York: Clarendon, Oxford
University Press.
Cassam, Q. (2007) The Possibility of Knowledge, Oxford: Clarendon, Oxford University Press.
Chandroo, K., Duncan, I. and Moccia, R. (2004) “Can Fish Suffer? Perspectives on Sentience, Pain, Fear
and Stress,” Applied Animal Behaviour Science 86: 225–250.
Cherfas, J. (1977) “Games Animals Play,” New Scientist 75: 672–673.
Cockburn, D. (1994) “Human Beings and Giant Squids,” Philosophy 69: 135–150.
Cottingham, J. (1978) “‘A Brute to the Brutes?’ Descartes’ Treatment of Animals,” Philosophy 53: 551–559.
Craig, A. D. (2009) “How Do You Feel–Now? The Anterior Insula and Human Awareness,” Nature Reviews
Neuroscience 10: 59–70.
Crick, F. and Clark, J. (1994) “The Astonishing Hypothesis,” Journal of Consciousness Studies 1(1): 10–6.
Dally, J. M., Emery, N. J. and Clayton, N. S. (2006) “Food-Caching Western Scrub-Jays Keep Track of Who
Was Watching When,” Science 312: 1662–1665.
DeGrazia, D. (1996) Taking Animals Seriously: Mental Life and Moral Status, Cambridge, MA: Cambridge
University Press.

Free download pdf