rapaport@adara.cs.Buffalo.EDU (William J. Rapaport) (03/05/90)
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Kluwer Academic Publishers announces
MINDS AND MACHINES
Journal for Artificial Intelligence, Philosophy, and Cognitive Science
ISSN 0924-6495
(previously announced as `Philosophy and Artificial Intelligence')
EDITORIAL FOCUS:
Machines and Mentality
Knowledge and its Representation
Epistemic Aspects of Computer Programming
Connectionist Conceptions
Artificial Intelligence and Epistemology
Computer Methodology
Computational Approaches to Philosophical Issues
Philosophy of Computer Science
Simulation and Modeling
Ethical Aspects of Artificial Intelligence
EDITOR:
James H. Fetzer, University of Minnesota, Duluth, MN, USA
BOOK REVIEW EDITOR:
William J. Rapaport, SUNY Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, USA
EDITORIAL BOARD (as of March 1990)
Jon Barwise Stanford University, USA
Andy Clark University of Sussex, UK
Robert Cummins University of Arizona, USA
Fred Dretske University of Wisconsin at Madison, USA
Jerry Fodor Rutgers University, USA
Clark Glymour Carnegie-Mellon University, USA
Stevan Harnad Princeton University, USA
John Haugeland University of Pittsburgh, USA
Jaakko Hintikka Florida State University, USA
David Israel SRI International, USA
Philip Johnson-Laird Princeton University, USA
Frank Keil Cornell University, USA
Henry Kyburg University of Rochester, USA
John McCarthy Stanford University, USA
Donald Nute University of Georgia, USA
Zenon Pylyshyn University of Western Ontario, Canada
Barry Richards Imperial College, London, UK
Roger C. Schank Northwestern University, USA
John Searle University of California at Berkeley, USA
Stephen Stich Rutgers University, USA
Terry Winograd Stanford University, USA
MINDS AND MACHINES affords an international forum for discussion and
debate of important and controversial issues concerning significant
developments within its areas of editorial focus. Well-reasoned
contributions from diverse theoretical perspectives are welcome, and
every effort will be made to insure their prompt publication. Among the
features that are intended to make this journal distinctive within the
field are these:
o Strong stands on controversial issues are specifically encouraged;
o Important articles exceeding normal journal length may appear;
o Special issues devoted to specific topics will be a regular feature;
o Review essays discussing current problem situations will appear;
o Critical responses to previously published pieces are also invited.
This journal is intended to foster a tradition of criticism within the
AI and philosophical communities on problems and issues of common
concern. Its scope explicitly encompasses philosophical aspects of
computer science. All submissions will be subject to review.
Publication will begin with a single volume of four issues per year.
The first issue will appear in January 1991.
Contributors should send 4 copies of their manuscript to:
James H. Fetzer, Editor
MINDS AND MACHINES
Department of Philosophy
University of Minnesota
Duluth, MN 55812
USA
phil@ub.d.umn.edu
AI_and_PHIL@ub.d.umn.edu
Correspondence concerning books for review should be sent to:
William J. Rapaport, Book Review Editor
MINDS AND MACHINES
Center for Cognitive Science
Department of Computer Science
SUNY Buffalo
Buffalo, NY 14260
USA
rapaport@cs.buffalo.edu
rapaport@sunybcs.bitnet
Subscription information and sample copies will be available from:
Kluwer Academic Publishers Group
P.O. Box 322
3300 AH Dordrecht
The Netherlands
or
Kluwer Academic Publishers
101 Philip Drive
Norwell, MA 02061
USA
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