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Valerie G Hardcastle
Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies - Affiliate Faculty
Philosophy - Tenure-Track Faculty
Psychology - Tenure-Track Faculty
201-A McMicken Hall
513-556-5859
valerie.hardcastle@uc.edu
Professional Summary
An internationally recognized scholar, Valerie is the author of five books and over 120 essays. She studies the nature and structure of interdisciplinary theories in the cognitive sciences and has focused primarily on developing a philosophical framework for understanding conscious phenomena responsive to neuroscientific, psychiatric, and psychological data. Currently, she is investigating the neuroscience of violence and its implications for both our understanding of human nature and the criminal justice system. She is also trying to figure out whether notions of embodied cognition help or hinder theorizing about consciousness.
She received a bachelor’s degree with a double major in philosophy and political science from the University of California, Berkeley, a master’s degree in philosophy from the University of Houston, and an interdisciplinary PhD in cognitive science and philosophy from the University of California, San Diego. She has recently returned from an extended stint in higher education administration, from which she is still recovering.
Research Interests
Areas of Specialization: philosophy of neuroscience/biology, philosophy of cognitive science, philosophy of psychology, and philosophical implications of psychiatry
Areas of Research Interest:bBioethics/neuroethics, behavioral neuroscience, neuropsychology, cognitive psychology, philosophy of mind
Areas of Teaching Competence: metaphysics, science studies, feminist philosophy of science
Peer Reviewed Publications
Buller, David J., & Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2000). Evolutionary Psychology, Meet Developmental Neurobiology: Against Promiscuous Modularity. Brain and Mind: A Transdisciplinary Journal of Neuroscience and Neurophilosophy, 1(3), 307, 325.
Glymour, B., Grush, R., Hardcastle, V.G., Keeley, B., Ramsey, J., Shagrir, O., & Watson, E. (1992). The Cartesian Theater Stance. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 15(2), 209-210.
Hardcastle, V G (1996). Ways of knowing. Consciousness and cognition, 5(3), 359-67.
Hardcastle, V G (1997). Consciousness and the neurobiology of perceptual binding. Seminars in neurology, 17(2), 163-70.
Hardcastle, V G (1998). Assuming away the explanatory gap. Consciousness and cognition, 7(2), 173-9.
Hardcastle, V G (1999). On being importantly necessary for consciousness. Consciousness and cognition, 8(2), 152-4.
Hardcastle, V G (2001). Consciousness: chili of the brain. Consciousness and cognition, 10(3), 418-20; discussion 4.
Hardcastle, V.G. & Steward, C.M. (2003). "Neuroscience and the Art of Single Cell Recordings." Biology and Philosophy, Volume 18, No. 1, 195-208.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1993). Conscious Computations. The Electronic Journal of Analytic Philosophy, 1(3).
Hardcastle, V.G. (1993). Evolutionary Epistemology as an Overlapping, Interlevel Theory. Biology and Philosophy, 8, 173-192.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1994). Psychology's Binding Problem and Possible Neurobiological Solutions. Journal of Consciousness Studies: Controversies in Science and the Humanities, vol.1(no. 1), 66-90.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1996). Précis of Locating Consciousness. Psychology.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1997). Distinctions without Differences: Commentary on Horgan and Tienson’s Connectionism and the Philosophy of Psychology. Philosophical Psychology, 10(3), 347-358.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1998). On the Matter of Minds and Mental Causation. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Vol. LVIII(No. 1), 1-25.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1999). What We Don't Know about the Brain. ) Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Vol. 30(No. 1), 69-89.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2002). Why Turing Machine Equivalence Is (Still) Important in Cognitive Science: A Reply to Eliasmith. Journal of Theoretical and Artificial Intelligence, 14(1), 9-12.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2003) “Emotions and Narratives Selves,” Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, Vol. 10, No. 4, pp. 353-355.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2003). Life at the Borders: Habit, Addiction, and Self-Control. Journal of Experimental and Artificial Intelligence, 15(2), 243-253.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2004) “The Elusive Illusion of Sensation,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 27, No. 5, pp. 662-663
Hardcastle, V.G. (2008) “Neither Necessary nor Sufficient for Addiction.” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 31, No. 4, pp. 447-448.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2012) “The Pragmatics of Science, Self, and Explanation,” American Journal of Bioethics-Neuroscience, Vol. 3, No. 4: 79-80.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2013) “The Neuroscience of Violence and Human Nature,” Western Humanities Alliance.
Hardcastle, V.G. and Stewart, C.M. “Neuroscience and the Art of Single Cell Recordings” (2003) Biology and Philosophy, Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 195-208.
Hardcastle, V.G. and Stewart, C.M. “What Do Brain Data Really Show?” (2003) Philosophy of Science.
Hardcastle, V.G. “Top-down versus. Bottom-up is Not the Same Thing as Psychological versus Biological,” (2003) Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 25, No. 5, pp. 585-586.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2004) “Schizophrenia: A Benign Trait,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 27, No. 6, pp. 859-860.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2004) “Situated Reductionism, or How to Be an Internalist and an Externalist at the Same Time,” Journal of Consciousness Studies, Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 39-42.
Hardcastle, V.G., & Dietrich, E. (2001). Toward a Book of Counter-examples in Cognitive Science: Dynamic Systems, Emotions, and Aardvarks. Danish Yearbook of Philosophy, 36, 35-48.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1989). The Competent Scientist Meets the Empiricist Mind. CRL Newsletter, 3(4), 5-17.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1990). In Defense of a Different Taxonomy: a Reply to Owens. The Philosophical Review, 99(3), 425, 431.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1991). Epiphenomenalism and the Reduction of Experience. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 14(4), 680.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1993). A New Agenda for Studying Consciousness: Commentary of Puccetti on Split-Brain. Psycholoquy.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1993). Discrimination versus Communication. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 16(4), 649-650.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1995). An Expanded Role for the P300: An Addendum to Klimesch. Psycholoquy.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1996). Modeling for Modeling’s Sake?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 19(2), 299.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1996). Ways of Knowing. Consciousness and Cognition, 5(3), 359-367.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1997). Consciousness and the Neurobiology of Perceptual Binding. Seminars in Neuroscience, 17(2), 163-170.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1997). Distinguishing Philosophy from Science: Reply to Laasko’s Review of Hardcastle on Locating Consciousness. Psycholoquy.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1997). ERPs and the Modularity of Cognitive Processes. Brain and Behavioral Sciences, 20(3), 520-521.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1997). Pains Are In the Head, Not in the Spine. Brain and Behavioral Sciences, 20(3), 451-452.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1997). Why Science Is Important to Philosophy: Reply to Levine’s Review of Hardcastle on Locating Consciousness. Psycholoquy.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1998). Assuming Away the Explanatory Gap. Consciousness and Cognition, 7, 173-179.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1999). On Being Importantly Necessary for Consciousness. Consciousness and Cognition, 8, 152-154.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1999). Seeking Unconscious Mental Life. Anthropology and Philosophy, 3(2), 77-88.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1999). The Development of the Narrative Self. Cognitive Systems Research, 1(1), 77-86.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2000). Hard Things Made Hard. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 7(4), 51-53.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2001). Consciousness: Chili of the Brain. Consciousness and Cognition, 10, 418-420.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2001). Not Guilty as Charged. A Reply to Garfield. Metascience, 10(2), 189-192.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2001). The View from Within. A Critical Review of John Horgan’s The Undiscovered Mind: How the Human Brain defies Replication, Medication, and Explanation. Brain and Mind, 2, 239-242.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2003). Emotions and Narratives Selves. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, 10(4), 353-355.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2004). Situated Reductionism, or How to Be an Internalist and an Externalist at the Same Time. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 11(1), 39-42.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1991). Partitions, Probabilistic Causal Laws, and Simpson's Paradox. Synthese: An International Journal for Epistemology, Methodology and Philosophy of Science 209, 228.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1992). Reduction, Explanatory Extension, and the Mind/Brain Sciences. Philosophy of Science, 59(3), 408, 428.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1993). The Naturalists versus the Skeptics: The Debate Over a Scientific Understanding of Consciousness. Journal of Mind and Behavior, 14(1), 27, 50.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1994). Indicator Semantics and Dretske's Function. Philosophical Psychology, 7(3), 367, 382.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1994). The Image of Observables. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 45(2), 585, 597.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1995). A Critique of Information Processing Theories of Consciousness. Minds and Machines: Journal for Artificial Intelligence, Philosophy, and Cognitive Science, 5(1), 89, 107.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1995). Computationalism. Synthese: An International Journal for Epistemology, Methodology and Philosophy of Science, 105(3), 303, 317.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1995). Philosophy of Psychology Meets the Semantic View. Proceedings of the Biennial Meetings of the Philosophy of Science Association, 2, 24, 34.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). Changing Perspectives of Motherhood: Images from the Aliens Trilogy. Film and Philosophy, 3, 167, 175.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). Discovering the Moment of Consciousness? I: Bridging Techniques at Work. Philosophical Psychology, 9(2), 149, 166.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). Discovering the Moment of Consciousness? II: An ERP Analysis of Priming Using Novel Visual Stimuli. Philosophical Psychology, 9(2), 167, 196.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). Functionalism's Response to the Problem of Absent Qualia: More Discussion of Zombies. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 3(4), 357, 373.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). How We Get There From Here: Dissolution of the Binding Problem. Journal of Mind and Behavior, 17(3), 251, 266.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). The Why of Consciousness: A Non-Issue for Materialists. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 3(1), 7, 13.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1997). Discussion: [Explanation] Is Explanation Better. Philosophy of Science, 64(1), 154, 160.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1997). Distinctions without Differences: Commentary on Horgan and Tienson's Connectionism and the Philosophy of Psychology. Philosophical Psychology, 10(3), 373, 384.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1997). When a Pain Is Not. Journal of Philosophy, 94(8), 381, 406.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1998). The Puzzle of Attention, the Importance of Metaphors. Philosophical Psychology, 11(3), 331, 351.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1999). It's O.K. to Be Complicated: The Case of Emotion. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 6(11-12), 237, 249.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1999). Scientific Papers Have Various Structures. Philosophy of Science, 66(3), 415, 439.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2000). Hard Things Made Hard. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 7(4), 51, 53.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2003). Emotions and Narrative Selves. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, 10(4), 353, 355.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2004). Peer Commentary on "Are There Neural Correlates of Consciousness": Situated Reductionism, or How to Be an Internalist and an Externalist at the Same Time. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 11(1), 39, 42.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray, & Flanagan, Owen (1999). Multiplex vs. Multiple Selves: Distinguishing Dissociative Disorders. Monist: An International Quarterly Journal of General Philosophical Inquiry, 82(4), 645, 657.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray, & Stewart, C. Matthew (2002). What Do Brain Data Really Show?. Philosophy of Science, 69(3 Supplement), S72, S82.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray, & Stewart, Rosalyn Walker (2002). Supporting irrational suicide. Bioethics, 16(5), 425-38.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray, & Walker Stewart, Rosalyn (2002). Supporting Irrational Suicide. Bioethics, 16(5), 425, 438.
Hardcastle, Valerie. (1999). Agreement on Finding Consciousness: Reply to Garfield’s Review of Hardcastle on Locating Consciousness. Psycholoquy.
Hardcastle, V.G. “Top-down versus. Bottom-up is Not the Same Thing as Psychological versus Biological,” (2003) Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 25, No. 5, pp. 585-586.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2004) “Schizophrenia: A Benign Trait,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 27, No. 6, pp. 859-860.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2004) “The Elusive Illusion of Sensation,” Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Vol. 27, No. 5, pp. 662-663.
Hardcastle, Valerie. (1999) The Non-Trivial Doctrine of Cognitive Neuroscience. Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
Hardcastle, Valerie. (1999). Visual Processing Is Not Visual Consciousness. Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2013) “It Isn’t as Simple as It Seems: Understanding and Treating Psychopathy,” American Journal of Bioethics-Neuroscience
Books
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1995). Locating Consciousness. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia: J. Benjamins.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1996). How to Build a Theory in Cognitive Science. Albany: State University of New York Press.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1999). The Myth of Pain. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (1999). Where Biology Meets Psychology: Philosophical Essays. Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray, & Dietrich, E. (2004). Sisyphus's Boulder: The Knowable and Its Limits in Scientific and Philosophical Attempts to Understand Conciousness. Philadelphia and Amsterdam: John Benjamins Press (Advances in Consciousness Research Series).
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray. Constructing Selves. Philadelphia and Amsterdam: John Benjamins Press (Advances in Consciousness Research Series).
Book Chapters
Bickle, J, and Hardcastle, VG (2012) “Philosophy of Neuroscience.” In eLS: John Wiley & Sons Ltd: Chichester, UK. http://www.els.net/[DOI: 10.1002/9780470015902.a0024144].
Flanagan, O, & Hardcastle, V.G., Nahmias, E. (2001). The Evolution of Intelligence. In R. Sternberg (Eds.), Is Human Intelligence an Adaptation? Cautionary Observations from Philosophy of Biology (pp. 199-222). New York: Oxford University Press.
Garnar, Andrew, & Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2004). The Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Companion. In Radden, Jennifer (Eds.), Neurobiological Models: An Unnecessary Divide--Neural Models in Psychiatry (pp. 364, 380). Oxford: Oxford Univ Pr.
Güzeldere, G., Flanagan, O., & Hardcastle, V.G (1999). The New Cognitive Neurosciences. In M. Gazzaniga (Eds.), Nature and Function of Consciousness: The Case of Blindsight (pp. 1277-1284). Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Hardcastle, G.L. & Hardcastle V.G. (1998). Electronic Communication in the Classroom. In D. Reiss, D. Selfe, and A. Young (Eds.), Extending Classroom Discussion—Informal Writing and the Internet (pp. 282-295). NCTE Press.
Hardcastle, G.L. & Hardcastle, V.G. (2000). Teaching with Technology: Seventy-Five Professors from Eight Universities Tell Their Stories. In D.G. Brown (Eds.), Promoting Philosophical Discussion with Computer-Mediated Technology (pp. 172-173). Boston: Anker Publishing.
Hardcastle, V.G and Stewart, R.W. (2008) “Reduction, Phenomenology, and Embodied Cognition: Perspectives from Medicine and Psychiatry,” in J. Hohway and J. Kallestrup (ed.) Being Reduced: New Essays on Reduction, Explanation, and Causation. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 20-33.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1993). The Philosophers Annual, Vol. XVIII. In P. Grim, G.Mar, P.Williams (Eds.), Philosophy of Psychology Meets the Semantic View
Hardcastle, V.G. (1996). Encyclopedia of Philosophy—Supplement. In D.M. Borchert (Eds.), Eliminative Materialism (pp. 136-137). New York: Macmillan.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1996). Thought Fugues: An Introduction to Knowledge and Reality. In V.G. Hardcastle (Eds.), Functionalism (pp. 271-278). Kendell/Hunt Publishing.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1996). Toward a Science for Consciousness. In S.R. Hammeroff, A.W. Kaszniak, and A.C. Scott (eds.) (Eds.), The Binding Problem and Neurophysiological Oscillations (pp. 51, 65). Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1997). Neural Basis of Consciousness. In N. Osaka (Eds.), Attention versus Consciousness: A Distinction with a Difference (pp. 105-120). Amsterdam: John Benjamins Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1998). A Companion to Cognitive Science. In W. Bechtel and G. Graham (Eds.), The Problem of Perceptual Binding (pp. 525-540). New York: Basil Blackwell.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1999). Emotional and Intelligent: The Tangled Knot of Cognition; Proceedings of the American Association for Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) 1998 Fall Symposium. Emotional Thought or Thoughtful Emotions AAAI Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1999). Where Biology Meets Psychology: Philosophical Essays. In V.G. Hardcastle (Eds.), Understanding Functions: A Pragmatic Approach (pp. 27-43). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (1999).) Where Biology Meets Psychology: Philosophical Essays. In V.G. Hardcastle (Eds.), Introduction (pp. ix-xii). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2000). Cognet. How Not to Identify Pain, or Where the IASP Goes Astray Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2000). Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Empirical and Conceptual Questions. In T. Metzinger (Eds.), How to Understand the N in NCC (pp. 259-264). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2000). The Caldron of Consciousness: Desire and Motivation. In N. Newton and R. Ellis (Eds.), Dissolving Differences: How to Understand the Competing Approaches to Human Emotion (pp. 119-131). Amsterdam: John Benjamins Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2001). Philosophy and the Neurosciences: A Reader. In W. Bechtel, P. Mandik, J. Mundale, and R.S. Stufflebeam (Eds.), The Nature of Pain (pp. 295-311). New York: Basil Blackwell.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2003). Narrative and Consciousness: Literature, Psychology, and the Brain. In G. Fireman, T.E. McVay, and O. Flanagan (Eds.), The Development of the Self (pp. 37-50). New York: Oxford University Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2003). Neural Basis of Consciousness. In N. Osaka (Eds.), Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society (pp. 105-120). Amsterdam: John Benjamins Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “David Courtnay Marr.” In N. Koertge (Ed.) New Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Volume 5. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 32-34.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “Heinrich Klüver.” In N. Koertge (Ed.) New Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Volume 4. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 141-144.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “Patricia Shoer Goldman-Rakic.” In N. Koertge (Ed.) New Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Volume 3. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 145-148.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “The Theoretical and Methodological Foundations of Cognitive Neuroscience,” P. Thagard (Ed.) Handbook of Cognitive Science. New York: Blackwell.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “Walter Rudolf Hess.” In N. Koertge (Ed.) New Dictionary of Scientific Biography, Volume 3. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, pp. 302-306.
Hardcastle, V.G. (forthcoming), “Pain, Philosophical Issues about,” Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. London: MacMillan.
Hardcastle, V.G. (in press) P. Grimm (Ed.) Ten Questions, pp. 59-67.
Hardcastle, V.G. Dictionary of Scientific Biography. In N. Koertge (Eds.), Heinrich Klüver Scribners.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “The Theoretical and Methodological Foundations of Cognitive Neuroscience,” P. Thagard (Ed.) Handbook of Cognitive Science. New York: Blackwell..
Hardcastle, V.G. (2005) “Philosophy of Neuroscience,” in S. Sakar and J. Pfeifer (Eds.) The Philosophy of Science: An Encyclopedia. Routledge, New York.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2007) “The Philosophy of Neurobiology.” In M. Ruse (Ed.) Handbook of Philosophy of Biology. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2009) “The Interface between Psychology and Philosophy,” Routledge Companion for Philosophy of Psychology.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2009) “A Holistic Reduction? Theorizing in the Cognitive Sciences: A Review of Mind from Body: Experience from Neural Structure,” Cortex, Vol. 45, pp. 693-694.
Hardcastle, V.G. (2012) “Pain,” in M. Matthen (Ed.) The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Perception. Oxford University Press: New York.
Hardcastle, V.G., and Stewart, C.M. “Localization in the Brain and Other Illusions,” (2005) in, A Brooks, K. Akins (eds). Cognition and the Brain: The Philosophy and Neuroscience Movement. Cambridge University Press, pp. 27-39. Reprinted as "La Localisation dans le Cerveau et Autres Illusions" in P. Poirier, L. Facher, E. Ennan, and E. Racine (Eds.) Philosophie des Neurosciences et Neurophilosophie. Paris/Bruxelles: De Boeck Université.
Hardcastle, V.G., and Stewart, C.M. (2010) “fMRI: A Cerebrascope for the Brain? The Case of Pain.” In J. Bickle (Ed.) Oxford Companion to Philosophy and Neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press.
Hardcastle, Valerie (1993). Philosophy and the Cognitive Sciences: Papers of the 16th International Wittgenstein Symposium. In R. Casati and G. White (Eds.), The Pragmatics of Computational Theories in Cognitive Science (pp. 191-196). Austria: The Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2000). The Caldron of Consciousness: Motivation. In Affect and Self-Organization--An Anthology, Ellis, Ralph D. (Eds.), Dissolving Differences: How to Understand the Competing Approaches to Human Emotion (pp. 119, 131). Amsterdam: J Benjamins.
V.G., & Stewart, C.M. Theory and Method in the Neurosciences. In P. Machamer, R. Grush, and P. McLaughlin (Eds.), The Structure of Neuroscientific Theories (pp. 30-44). Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2002). Functions: New Essays in the Philosophy of Psychology and Biology. In Ariew, Andre (Eds.), On the Normativity of Functions (pp. 144, 156). Oxford: Oxford Univ Pr.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray (2004). Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness: An Anthology. In Gennaro, Rocco J. (Eds.), HOT Theories of Consciousness: More Sad Tales of Philosophical Intuitions Gone Astray (pp. 277, 294). Amsterdam: John Benjamins.
Hardcastle, Valerie Gray, & Stewart, C.Matthew (2005). Cognition and the Brain: The Philosophy and Neuroscience Movement. In Brook, Andrew (Eds.), Localization in the Brain and Other Illusions (pp. 27, 39). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.
Reviews
(1995). Self and Consciousness: Multiple Perspectives. Psyche, [Review of A Self Divided: Review of Self and Consciousness: Multiple Perspectives ].
(1996). Speaking Minds: Interviews with Twenty- Eminent Cognitive Scientists. Canadian Philosophical Review, 380-382.
(1997). Perception. Philosophical Psychology, 242-245.
(1997). Québec Studies in the Philosophy of Science: Part II, Biology, Psychology, Cognitive Science and Economics. Canadian Philosophical Review, 52-54.
Pain: New Essays on Its Nature and the Methodology of Its Study. Murat Aydede (Ed.) (forthcoming) Psyche.
The Digital Phoenix: How Computers Are Changing Philosophy. Edited by Terrell Ward Bynum and James H. Moore. (in press) Philosophical Books.
The Neuropsychology of High-Level Vision: Collected Tutorial Essays. Edited by Martha J. Farah and Graham Ratcliff. (forthcoming). Psyche.
The Re-Emergence of Emergence: The Emergentist Hypothesis from Science to Religion. Philip Clayton and Paul Davies (Ed.) (2007) The Journal of Consciousness Studies, Vol. 14, No. 11, pp. 119-122.
Ignorance and Imagination: The Epistemic Origin of the Problem of Consciousness. Daniel Stoljar. (2008) Philosophical Books, Vol. 49, No 3, pp. 274-275.
Philosophy of the Brain. Georg Northoff (2004) Trends in Cognitive Science, Vol. 8, No. 8, pp. 339-340.
The Mind as Scientific Object: Between Brain and Culture. C.E. Erneling and D.M. Johnson (eds.) (2005) Consciousness and Cognition, Vol. 12. No. 8, pp. 75-93.
The Re-Emergence of Emergence: The Emergentist Hypothesis from Science to Religion. Philip Clayton and Paul Davies (Ed.) (2007) The Journal of Consciousness Studies, Vol. 14, No. 11, pp. 119-122.
Wondergenes: Genetic Enhancement and the Future of Society. Maxwell J. Mehlman (2005) Cerebrum.
Bryan Magee & Martin Millikan (1996). On Blindness. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 523-525.
Charles G. Gross. Brain, Vision, Memory: Tales in the History of Neuroscience.Research in Philosophy and Technology,
Colin McGinn. The Mysterious Flame: Conscious Minds in a Material World.Artificial Life,
David Chalmers (1996). The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory. Journal of Mind and Behavior, 391-398.
David Papineau. Thinking about Consciousness. Philosophical Books, 223-227.
Within Reason: Rationality and Human Behavior. Donald B. Calne. (2000) Metapsychology. http://mentalhelp.net/mhn/bookstore/db.cgi?uid=default&db=books&view_records=Search+Now&keyword=Within+Reason&Search.x=13&Search.y=14
Donald D. Price (2000). Psychological Mechanisms of Pain and Analgesia. Trends in Neurosciences, 587-588.
The Dream Drugstore: Chemically Altered States of Consciousness. J. Allan Hobson (2001). Metapsychology. http://mentalhelp.net/books/books.php?type=de&id=926
J.F. Iaccino (1996). Left Brain-Right Brain Differences. Philosophical Psychology, 111-113.
Jacob Murre (1993). Learning and Categorization in Modular Neural Networks. Psycholoquy, [Review of What Counts as Plausible? Critical Notice of Jacob Murre's Learning and Categorization in Modular Neural Networks ].
Jay Shulkin. Curt Richter: A Life in the Laboratory.Journal of the History of Biology,
Jean-Pierre Changeux & Alain Connes, trans. by M.B. DeBevoise (1996). Conversations on Mind, Matter, and Mathematics. Canadian Philosophical Review, 16-17.
Jeffrey Foss (2002). Science and the Riddle of Consciousness: A Solution. Dialogue: The Canadian Philosophical Review, 206-208.
Justin Leiber (1992). An Invitation to Cognitive Science. Journal of Mind and Behavior, 551-553.
Kim Sterleny & Paul Griffiths (2000). Sex and Death. Philosophy in Review / Comptes rendus Philosophiques, 227-228.
The Mind's Past. Michael S. Gazzaniga. (2001) Metapsychology. http://mentalhelp.net/mhn/bookstore/db.cgi?&uid=default&view_records=1&ISBN=0520224868
Michael Tye (1997). Ten Problems of Consciousness. American Journal of Psychology, [Review of Solving the Two Big Problems of Consciousness. Review of Ten Problems of Consciousness ] 468-474.
Owen Flanagan (1993). Consciousness Reconsidered. Psyche, 20-23.
Patricia Churchland (2003). Brain-Wiise: Studies in Neurophilosophy. Cerebrum, [Review of Believing in the Brain. A Review of Patricia Churchland's Brain-Wiise: Studies in Neurophilosophy ].
On the Contrary: Critical Essays, 1987-1997. Paul M. Churchland and Patricia S. Churchland. The Engine of Reason, the Seat of the Soul: A Philosophical Journey into the Brain. Paul M. Churchland. (in press). Journal of the History of the Neurosciences.
Radu J. Bogdan (2000). Interpreting Minds. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 737-739.
Sam S. Rakover (1994). Metapsychology: Missing Links in Behavior, Mind, and Science. Psycholoquy, [Review of Metapsychology for the Masses? Review of Metapsychology: Missing Links in Behavior, Mind, and Science ].
How Emotions Work. Jack Katz. 2003. Metapsychology. http://mentalhelp.net/books/books.php?type=de&id=1592.
Talis Bachmann (1997). Psychophysiology of Visual Masking: The Fine Structure of Conscious Experience. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 190-192.
Biomedical Ethics. Terry O’Neil. (2002) Metapsychology. http://mentalhelp.net/books/books.php?type=de&id=1000
William H. Calvin (1998). The Cerebral Code: Thinking a Thought in the Mosaics of the Mind. Philosophical Psychology, 551-553.
Matters of Mind: Consciousness, Reason and Nature. Scott Sturgeon (2003) Philosophical Books, Vol 43, No. 3, pp. 234-236.
Other Publications
Hardcastle, V.G. (2013) “Editor’s Choice,” The Philosopher’s Magazine.
Hardcastle, Valerie (2002). Turing, Turing Test, Turin Equivalence. Special Issue of the Journal of Experimental and Theoretical Artificial Intelligence, 14(1).
Work in Progress
Hardcastle, V.G. Handbook of Philosophy of Biology. In M. Ruse (Eds.), The Philosophy of Neurobiology New York: Cambridge University Press.
Hardcastle, V.G. Routledge Handbook for Philosophy of Psychology. The Interface between Psychology and Philosophy



