
When does consciousness first emerge in human development? Professor Tim Bayne develops one answer to this question, and suggests that this answer has interesting implications for the question of artificial consciousness.
Tim Bayne is a philosopher of mind and cognitive science, with a particular interest in the nature of consciousness. He is currently Professor of Philosophy at Monash University (Melbourne), having taught previously at Macquarie University, the University of Western Ontario, the University of Manchester and the University of Oxford. He is the author of The Unity of Consciousness (2010) and Thought: A Very Short Introduction (2013), and an editor of Delusion and Self-Deception (2008), The Oxford Companion to Consciousness (2009), and Cognitive Phenomenology (2011). His current research concerns the measurement of consciousness, and whether it is possible to build a consciousness meter. Other research interests include the nature of conscious thought, disorders of consciousness, and taxonomy in psychiatry. He is a member of the CIFAR Brain, Mind and Consciousness program.
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- Professor Tim Bayne (Monash University)
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- Nuhu Osman Attah