Notes

  1. . Richard M. Bucke, Cosmic Consciousness, rev. ed. (New York: Dutton, 1969). Since the publication of this volume in 1901 it has undergone some twenty‐two editions, the latest in 1969.
  2. . R. W.Sperry, E.Zaidel, and D.Zaidel, “Self Recognition and Social Awareness in the Deconnected Minor Hemisphere,”Neuropsychologia  17 (1979): 153–66; R. D.Nebes, and R. W.Sperry, “Hemispheric Deconnection Syndrome with Cerebral Birth Injury in the Dominant Arm Area,”Neuropsycholigia  9 (1971): 247–59; M. S. Gazzaniga, The Bisected Brain (New York: Appleton Century Crofts, 1970); J. E.Bogen, “The Other Side of the Brain–‐I1 An Appositional Mind,”Bulletin of Los Angeles Neurological Society  34 (1961): 162; JerreLevy‐Agresti, and R. W.Sperry, “Differential Perceptual Capacities in Major and Minor Hemispheres,”Proceedings of the National Academy of Science  61 (1968): 1151–54; and C. Trevarthen, “Brain Bisymmetry and the Role of the Corpus Calosum in Behavior and Conscious Experience,” presented at the International Colloquium on Interhemispheric Relations, Czechoslovakia, June 10–13, 1969.
  3. . L.Bevilacqua, E.Capitani, C.Luzzatti, and H. R.Spinnler, “Does the Hemisphere Stimulated Play a Specific Role in Delayed Recognition of Complex Abstract Patterns? A Tachistoscopic Study,”Neuropsychologia  17 (1979): 93–97.
  4. . S. C.Leehey, and A.Cahn, “Lateral Asymmetries in the Recognition of Words, Familiar Faces and Unfamiliar FacesNeuropsychologia  17 (1981): 619–35; R. D.Hilliard, “Hemispheric Laterality Effects on a Facial Recognition Task in Normal Subjects,”Cortex  9 (1973): 246–58; R. W. Sperry, “Lateral Specialization in Surgically Separated Hemispheres,” in The Neurosciences: Third Study Program, ed. P. J. Vinken and G. W. Bruyn (Cambridge, Mass.: Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1974): R.Yin, “Face Recognition by Brain Injured Patients: A Dissociable Ability?”Neuropsychologia  8 (1970): 395–402; and A.Benton, and M. W.VanAllen, “Impairment in Facial Recognition in Patients with Cerebral Disease,”Cortex  4 (1968): 344–58.
  5. . E.Ladavas, C.Umilta, and P. E.Ricci‐Bitli, “Evidence for Sex Differences in Right‐hemisphere Dominance for Emotions,”Neuropsychologia  18 (1980): 361–66 ; R. G.Ley and M. P.Bryden, “The Right Hemisphere and Emotion,”Bruin and Language  7 (1979): 127–38; and M.Suberi and W.McKeever, “Differential Right Hemispheric Memory Storage of Emotional and Non‐emotional Faces,”Neuropsychologia  15 (1977): 757–68.
  6. . H. A.Buchtel, E.Campari, C.DeRisio, and R.Rota, “Hemispheric Differences in Discriminative Reaction Time to Facial Expressions,”Italian Journal of Psychology  5 (1978): 159–69; and T.Landes, G.Assal, and E.Perret, “Opposite Cerebral Hemispheric Superiorities for Visual Associative Processing of Emotional Facial Expressions and Objects,”Nature  178 (1979): 739–40.
  7. . Bogen (n. 2 above); R.Puccetti, “Brain Bisection and Personal Identity,”British Journal of the Philosophy of Science  24 (1973): 339–55.
  8. . Sperry, Zaidel, and Zaidel (n. 2 above).
  9. . Ibid.
  10. . B.Jones, and M.Mishkin, “Limbic Lesions and the Problem of Stimulus‐reinforcement Associations,”Explorations in Neurology  36 (1972): 362–77; M. Mishkin, “Cortical Visual Areas and Their Interaction,” in Brain and Human Behavior, ed. A. G. Karczmar and J. C. Eccles (New York: Springer, 1972), pp. 187–208; and J.Sunshine, and M. A.Mishkin, “A Visual‐limbic Pathway Serving Visual Associative Functions in Rhesus Monkeys,”Federation Proceedings  34 (1975): 440.
  11. . M.Mishkin, “Analogous Neural Models for Tactual and Visual Learning,”Neuropsychologia  17 (1979): 139–51.
  12. . L.Mills and G. B.Rollman, “Hemispheric Asymmetry for Auditory Perception of Temporal Order,”Neuropsychologia  18 (1980): 41–47.
  13. . R.Efron, “Effect of Handedness on the Perception of Simultaneity and Temporal Order,”Brain  86 (1963): 261–84.
  14. . M.Jeeves and N.Dixon, “Hemispheric Differences in Response Rates to Visual Stimuli,”Psychonomic Science  20 (1970): 249–51; and L.Swisher, and I.Hirsch, “Brain Damage and the Ordering of Two Temporally Successive Stimuli,”Neuropsychologia  10 (1972): 137–52.
  15. . A. R. Luria, Higher Cortical Functions in Man (New York: Basic Books, 1966); and A. R. Luria, “The Frontal Lobes and the Regulation of Behavior,” in Psychophysiology of the Frontal Lobes, ed. K. H. Pribram and A. R. Luria (New York: Academic Press, 1973).
  16. . G.Ratcliff, “Spatial Thought, Mental Rotation and the Right Cerebral Hemisphere,”Neuropsychologia  17 (1979): 49–54.
  17. . N.Butters, M.Barton, and B. A.Brody, “Role of the Right Parietal Lobe in the Mediation of Cross‐modal Associations and Reversible Operations in Space,”Cortex  6 (1970): 174–90; G. Cohen, “Hemispheric Differences in the Utilization of Advance Information,” in Attention and Performance, vol. 5, ed. P. M. A. Rabbit and S. Dornic (London: Academic Press, 1975); and L.Franco, and R. W.Sperry, “Hemisphere Lateralization for Cognitive Processing of Geometry,”Neuropsychologia  15 (1977): 107–14.
  18. . M.Grossman, “A Central Processor for Hierarchically‐structured Material: Evidence from Broca's Aphasia,”Neuropsychologia  18 (1980): 299–308.
  19. . See, e.g., Eugene G.D'Aquili, “The Neurobiological Bases of Myth and Concepts of Deity,”Zygon  13 (1978): 257–75.
  20. . Ibid., pp. 270–72; see also Eugene G.D'Aquili and CharlesLaughlin, Jr., “The Biopsychological Determinants of Religious Ritual Behavior,”Zygon  10 (1975): 32–58.
  21. . From St. Francis of Assisi, The Legends and Lauds, ed., selected and annotated by Otto Karrer, trans. N. Wydenbruck (London: Sheed and Ward, 1947), pp. 261–62, reprinted with permission by Sheed and Ward.