Abstract is missing.
- Artificial Consciousness: From Impossibility to MultiplicityChuanfei Chin. 3-18 [doi]
- Cognition as Embodied Morphological ComputationGordana Dodig-Crnkovic. 19-23 [doi]
- "The Action of the Brain" - Machine Models and Adaptive Functions in Turing and AshbyHajo Greif. 24-35 [doi]
- An Epistemological Approach to the Symbol Grounding Problem - The Difference Between Perception and Demonstrative Knowledge and Two Ways of Being MeaningfulJodi Guazzini. 36-39 [doi]
- An Enactive Theory of Need SatisfactionSoheil Human, Golnaz Bidabadi, Markus F. Peschl, Vadim Savenkov. 40-42 [doi]
- Agency, Qualia and Life: Connecting Mind and Body BiologicallyDavid Longinotti. 43-56 [doi]
- Dynamic Concept Spaces in Computational Creativity for MusicRené Mogensen. 57-68 [doi]
- Creative AI: Music Composition Programs as an Extension of the Composer's MindCaterina Moruzzi. 69-72 [doi]
- How Are Robots' Reasons for Action Grounded?Bryony Pierce. 73-80 [doi]
- Artificial Brains and Hybrid MindsPaul Schweizer. 81-91 [doi]
- Huge, but Unnoticed, Gaps Between Current AI and Natural IntelligenceAaron Sloman. 92-105 [doi]
- Social Cognition and Artificial AgentsAnna Strasser. 106-114 [doi]
- Mapping Intelligence: Requirements and PossibilitiesSankalp Bhatnagar, Anna Alexandrova, Shahar Avin, Stephen Cave, Lucy Cheke, Matthew Crosby, Jan Feyereisl, Marta Halina, Bao Sheng Loe, Seán Ó hÉigeartaigh, Fernando Martínez-Plumed, Huw Price, Henry Shevlin, Adrian Weller, Alan Winfield, José Hernández-Orallo. 117-135 [doi]
- Do Machine-Learning Machines Learn?Selmer Bringsjord, Naveen Sundar Govindarajulu, Shreya Banerjee, John Hummel. 136-157 [doi]
- Where Intelligence Lies: Externalist and Sociolinguistic Perspectives on the Turing Test and AIShlomo Danziger. 158-174 [doi]
- Modelling Machine Learning ModelsRaül Fabra-Boluda, Cèsar Ferri, José Hernández-Orallo, Fernando Martínez-Plumed, M. José Ramírez-Quintana. 175-186 [doi]
- Is Programming Done by Projection and Introspection?Sam Freed. 187-189 [doi]
- Supporting Pluralism by Artificial Intelligence: Conceptualizing Epistemic Disagreements as Digital ArtifactsSoheil Human, Golnaz Bidabadi, Vadim Savenkov. 190-193 [doi]
- The Frame Problem, Gödelian Incompleteness, and the Lucas-Penrose Argument: A Structural Analysis of Arguments About Limits of AI, and Its Physical and Metaphysical ConsequencesYoshihiro Maruyama. 194-206 [doi]
- Quantum Pancomputationalism and Statistical Data Science: From Symbolic to Statistical AI, and to Quantum AIYoshihiro Maruyama. 207-211 [doi]
- Getting Clarity by Defining Artificial Intelligence - A SurveyDagmar Monett, Colin W. P. Lewis. 212-214 [doi]
- Epistemic Computation and Artificial IntelligenceJirí Wiedermann, Jan van Leeuwen. 215-224 [doi]
- Will Machine Learning Yield Machine Intelligence?Carlos Zednik. 225-227 [doi]
- In Critique of RoboLaw: The Model of SmartLawPaulius Astromskis. 231-234 [doi]
- AAAI: An Argument Against Artificial IntelligenceSander Beckers. 235-247 [doi]
- Institutional Facts and AMAs in SocietyArzu Gokmen. 248-251 [doi]
- A Systematic Account of Machine Moral AgencyMahi Hardalupas. 252-254 [doi]
- A Framework for Exploring Intelligent Artificial PersonhoodThomas B. Kane. 255-258 [doi]
- Against Leben's Rawlsian Collision Algorithm for Autonomous VehiclesGeoff Keeling. 259-272 [doi]
- Moral Status of Digital Agents: Acting Under UncertaintyAbhishek Mishra. 273-287 [doi]
- Friendly Superintelligent AI: All You Need Is LoveMichael Prinzing. 288-301 [doi]
- Autonomous Weapon Systems - An Alleged Responsibility GapTorben Swoboda. 302-313 [doi]