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Credit: Nicholas Humphrey

Nicholas Humphrey

Emeritus Professor of Psychology, London School of Economics; Visiting Professor of Philosophy, New College of the Humanities; Senior Member, Darwin College, Cambridge

Profile – Nicholas Humphrey (b. 1943)

As a PhD student in Cambridge Humphrey discovered, almost by accident, that monkeys can still see after their visual cortex has been removed (the phenomenon later known as blindsight). In 1971, during several months at Dian Fossey’s gorilla research centre in Rwanda, he began to focus on the evolution of social intelligence, leading to the idea that human beings are ‘natural psychologists’ using introspection to model the minds of others. He convinced Richard Dawkins that memes are living structures; made a 1980s TV series called The Inner Eye; and has long worked for the cause of nuclear disarmament. Returning to Cambridge in 1990 after three years with Dan Dennett at Tufts, he worked on radically new ideas about the nature of sensation and qualia, arguing that sensations are a form of ‘bodily expression’. In Soul Dust: The magic of consciousness, he claims that phenomenal consciousness is a ‘magical mystery show’ designed by natural selection to have seemingly ‘out-of-this-world’ properties to make us feel special and transcendent.

More biographical information

Biography

Profile in the Guardian, July 2006

Personal website

Wikipedia

Publications

List of papers for download

List of books

Contributions on Edge

Articles in Prospect Magazine

Citations on Google Scholar

Selected publications relevant to consciousness

Humphrey, N. (1983). Consciousness regained: Chapters in the development of mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Google Books preview here.

Humphrey, N. (1986). The inner eye: Social intelligence in evolution. London: Faber & Faber. Google Books preview here.

Humphrey, N. (1987). The inner eye of consciousness. In C. Blakemore and S. Greenfield (Eds), Mindwaves: Thoughts on intelligence, identity, and consciousness (pp. 377–381). Oxford: Blackwell.

Humphrey, N. (1992). A history of the mind: Evolution and the birth of consciousness. London: Chatto & Windus. Google Books preview of 1999 edition (Copernicus) here.

Humphrey, N. (2000). How to solve the mind–body problem. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 7(4), 5–20, with commentaries, pp. 21–97, and reply, pp. 98–112. Reprinted in Humphrey (2002). The mind made flesh: Frontiers of psychology and evolution (pp. 90–114). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Paywall-protected journal record here. Full text (html, target article only) here.

Humphrey, N. (2002). The mind made flesh: Essays from the frontiers of psychology and evolution. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Google Books preview here.

Humphrey, N. (2006). Seeing red: A study in consciousness. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Google Books preview here.

Humphrey, N. (2011). Soul dust: The magic of consciousness. London: Quercus. Google Books preview here.

Humphrey, N. (2016). Redder than red illusionism or phenomenal surrealism? Journal of Consciousness Studies, 23(11–12), 116–123. Paywall-protected journal record here.

Video

His list of downloadable videos

The invention of consciousness. Lecture, EuroAsianPacific Joint Conference on Cognitive Science, Turin, September 2015

The magic of consciousness. The Royal Institution, September 2014; includes follow-up Q&A, March 2015

Soul dust: The science and art of consciousness. Creativity Lecture, Keble College, Oxford, May 2011

Audio

His list of downloadable audio

Interview for The Partially Examined Life, May 2015