unitI Epistemology; Chapter 1 The Dialectic of Intuition and Intellect: Fruitfulness as a Criterion, Pete A. Y. Gunter; Chapter 2 Durational Succession and Proto-Mental Agency, Andrew G. Bjelland; Chapter 3 Bergsonian Epistemology and Its Origins in Mathematical Thought, Jean Millet; Chapter 4 Intuition, Event-Atomism, and the Self, James W. Felt; unitII Neuropsychology; Chapter 5 Aspects of Henri Bergson’s Psycho-Physical Theory, Andrew C. Papanicolaou; Chapter 6 Bergson’s Theory of the Mind-Brain Relation, Mili? ?apek; Chapter 7 Bergson and the Brain: A Bio-Logical Analysis of Certain Intuitions, Karl H. Pribram; Chapter 8 Bergson and Freud on Aphasia: A Comparison, Arthur L. Benton; Chapter 9 Bergson and the French Neuropsychiatry Tradition, Athanase Tzavaras; unitIII Psychology; Chapter 10 Bergson and the Modern Psychology of Creativity, Frank Barron; Chapter 11 Bergson and a Pulsational-Wave Model of Temporality: A Way to Disentangle Theories in Gerontology, Charles R. Schmidtke; Chapter 12 Some Thoughts on the Relevance of Bergson to Contemporary Psychology, Mari Riess Jones; Chapter 13 Consciousness, Quantum Mechanics, and Random Physical Processes, Robert G. Jahn, Brenda J. Dunne; unitIV Towards a Unified Science: Philosophical and Scientific Evaluations; Chapter 14 Bergson and the Unification of the Sciences, Henry P. Stapp; Chapter 15 Bergson’s Duration and Quantal Spacetime Non-Separability, Oliver Costa de Beauregard; Chapter 16 Consciousness and Cosmology: Their Interrelations, George Wald; Chapter 17 Bergson, Whitehead, and Psychical Research, Leonard Eslick; Chapter 18 Bergson’s Aesthetic Creationism Compared to Whitehead’s, Charles Hartshorne;
Pete A. Y. Gunter teaches Philosophy at North Texas State University in Denton. Texas. A Yale Ph.D. in Philosophy (1963). Professor Andrew C. Papanicolaou is a research neuropsychologist at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston.