Donald MacKay's final lectures—the Gifford lectures

Philosophical Psychology 10 (4):517 – 521 (1997)
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Abstract

Delivered only months before his death, the Gifford Lectures allowed Donald MacKay to clarify and to emphasize his views on many important issues. MacKay stressed the primacy of personal experience and the differences between persons, brains, and machines. These positions are reviewed here, as are some of the reasons why MacKay may remain relatively unknown among American psychologists, philosophers, and neuroscientists

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