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  1. The problem of who: Multiple personality, personal identity, and the double brain.Andrew Apter - 1991 - Philosophical Psychology 4 (2):219-48.
  2.  79
    Depersonalization, the experience of prosthesis, and our cosmic insignificance: The experimental phenomenology of an altered state.Andrew Apter - 1992 - Philosophical Psychology 5 (3):257-285.
    Psychogenic depersonalization is an altered mental state consisting of an unusual discontinuity in the phenomenological perception of personal being; the individual is engulfed by feelings of unreality, self-detachment and unfamiliarity in which the self is felt to lack subjective perspective and the intuitive feeling of personal embodiment. A new sub-feature of depersonalization is delineated. 'Prosthesis' consists in the thought that the thinker is a 'mere thing'. It is a subjectively realized sense of the specific and objective 'thingness' of the particular (...)
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  3.  11
    "Que Faire?" Reconsidering Inventions of Africa.Andrew Apter - 1992 - Critical Inquiry 19 (1):87-104.
  4.  27
    Galton’s number.Herbert F. Crovitz, Harold Schiffman & Andrew Apter - 1991 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 29 (4):331-332.
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