Susan Hurley is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Warwick Her areas of special interest are: philosophy of psychology/neuroscience/cognitive science and philosophy of mind, ethics and political philosophy, philosophy of social science, relations between the cognitive and social sciences, the later Wittgenstein, rationality, foundations of decision theory. Among her recent works: Perspectives on Imitation: From Neuroscience to Social Science , co-edited with Nick Chater, 2 volumes, MIT Press (in press, forthcoming 2004); Rational Animals? co-edited with Matthew Nudds. Forthcoming 2005. Oxford University Press; "Active Perception and Perceiving Action: The Shared Circuits Hypothesis", in press, in T. Gendler and J. Hawthorne (eds.) Perceptual Experience, Oxford University Press.
Author of the following papers featured on interdisciplines.org:
· The shared circuits model. How control, mirroring, and simulation can enable imitation and mind reading
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