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1

Almeida, David. Illusion of the body: Introducing the body alive principle. United States: Mystic River Publsihing, 2012.

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2

Bartholomew. I come as a brother: A remembrance of illusions. Carlsbad, CA: Hay House, 1997.

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3

Bartholomew. "I come as a brother": A remembrance of illusions. Taos, NM: High Mesa Press, 1986.

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4

Holly, Kate. The weird, the annoying, and the gross! Racine, Wis: Golden Books Pub. Co., 1997.

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5

Lavallée, Guy. L' enveloppe visuelle du moi: Perception et hallucinatoire. Paris: Dunod, 1999.

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6

Sexual images of the self: The psychology of erotic sensations and illusions. Hillsdale, N.J: L. Erlbaum Associates, 1989.

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7

Paisley girl: A novel. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1999.

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8

Exploring consciousness. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002.

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9

Sandler, Corey. Ultimate Sega Game Strategies, for the Master and Genesis Systems. New York, NY: Bantam Books, 1990.

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10

Awesome Super Nintendo Secrets 4. Lahaina, HI: Sandwich Islands Publishing, 1995.

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11

Sandler, Corey. Official Sega Genesis and Game Gear strategies, 3RD Edition. New York: Bantam Books, 1992.

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12

Tom, Badgett, ed. Official Sega Genesis and Game Gear strategies, 2ND Edition. Toronto: Bantam Books, 1991.

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13

Parent's Guide to Video Games. Rocklin, CA: Prima Publishing, 1994.

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14

Prima. Official Sega Genesis: Power Tips Book. Rocklin, CA: Prima Publishing, 1992.

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15

Mcdermott, Leeanne. GamePro Presents: Sega Genesis Games Secrets: Greatest Tips. Rocklin: Prima Publishing, 1992.

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16

Gallo, Roe. Perfect Body: Beyond The Illusion. Jack Johnston Seminars, 2001.

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17

Morikawa, Kazunori. Geometric Illusions in the Human Face and Body. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199794607.003.0026.

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Clothing and cosmetic makeup take advantage of visual illusions so as to make the human body and face look more attractive. This chapter lists such real-life geometric illusions and reviews studies that psychophysically measured them. These illusions include the Müller-Lyer illusion, the Helmholtz illusion, the Delboeuf illusion, the “bicolor” illusion, the “shape echo” illusion, and perceptual completion. Puzzling characteristics of these bodily illusions, which can be called “biological illusions,” are discussed. The ways in which geometric illusions in the human face and body differ from classical geometric illusions consisting of simple lines are also discussed, and the concept of “biological motion” as a separate field is proposed.
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18

Amberson, Renee. Reality Is an Illusion. Light Library, 2023.

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19

Self Illusion. Harper Perennial, 2013.

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20

Collins, Mabel. The Illusion That Man Is Imprisoned In The Body. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2005.

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21

Pelengaris, Maria. The Veils of Illusion: An Allegory: Mind,body,spirit. Authorhouse, 2005.

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22

de Vignemont, Frédérique. Whose Body? Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198735885.003.0002.

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Does it feel different when I am aware that these arms are my own and when I am not? Advocates of the liberal view reply positively and claim that we have a primitive nonconceptual awareness of bodily ownership, whereas advocates of the conservative view reject a distinctive experiential signature for the sense of bodily ownership: ownership is something that we believe in, and not something that we experience. How to adjudicate the debate? This chapter appeals to the method of phenomenal contrast to argue that feelings of ownership are not philosophical fictions, contrary to what some have claimed. To do so, the chapter analyses in detail the rubber hand illusion and syndromes of disownership and rejects a cognitive interpretation of these cases.
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23

Self Illusion: How the Social Brain Creates Identity. Oxford University Press, Incorporated, 2012.

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24

Muscles in the Movies: Perfecting the Art of Illusion. University of Missouri Press, 2020.

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25

Ciunaite, Ilona. Liberation unleashed: A guide to breaking free from the illusion of a separate self. 2016.

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26

Ciunaite, Ilona. Liberation Unleashed: A Guide to Breaking Free from the Illusion of a Separate Self. New Harbinger Publications, 2016.

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27

Body In Question Image And Illusion In Two Chinese Films By Director Jiang Wen. Princeton University Press, 2008.

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28

Self Illusion: Why There Is No 'You' Inside Your Head. Little, Brown Book Group Limited, 2012.

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29

Hood, Bruce. Self Illusion: Why There Is No 'You' Inside Your Head. Little, Brown Book Group Limited, 2012.

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30

Jones, Charles J. Truth Avenger: Vol. I Enlightening the Dumb MAsses from Ignorance, Illusions, & Lies. Metamundo, 2020.

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31

Jones, Charles J. Truth Avenger: Vol. II Enlightening the Dumb MAsses from Ignorance, Illusions, & Lies. Metamundo, 2022.

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32

Bartholomew, Mary-Margaret Moore, Joy Franklin, and Jill Kramer. "I Come As a Brother": A Remembrance of Illusions. Hay House, 1997.

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33

Fisher, Seymour. Sexual Images of the Self: The Psychology of Erotic Sensations and Illusions. Taylor & Francis Group, 2016.

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34

de Vignemont, Frédérique. Mind the Body. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198735885.001.0001.

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Our own body seems to be the object that we know the best for we constantly receive a flow of internal information about it. Yet bodily awareness has attracted little attention in the literature, possibly because it seems reducible to William James’s description of a “feeling of the same old body always there” (1890, p. 242). But it is not true that our body always feels so familiar. In particular, puzzling neurological disorders and new bodily illusions raise a wide range of questions about the relationship between the body and the self. Although most of the time we experience our body as our own, it is possible to report feeling parts of our body as alien. It is also possible to experience extraneous objects, such as prosthetic hands, as our own. Hence, what makes us feel this particular body as our own? The fact that we feel sensations there? The fact that we can voluntarily move it? Or the fact that it needs protection for self-preservation? To answer these questions, we need a better understanding of the various aspects of bodily self-awareness, including the spatiality of bodily sensations, their multimodality, their role in social cognition, their relation to action, and to self-defence. Mind the Body thus provides a comprehensive treatment of bodily awareness and of the sense of bodily ownership, combining philosophical analysis with recent experimental results from cognitive science.
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35

Newnham, William. Essay on Superstition: Being an Inquiry into the Effects of Physical Influence on the Mind in the Production of Dreams, Visions, Ghosts, and Other Supernatural Appearances. Cambridge University Press, 2013.

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36

Newnham, W. Essay On Superstition: Being An Inquiry Into The Effects Of Physical Influence On The Mind. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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37

Newnham, William. Essay on Superstition: Being an Inquiry into the Effects of Physical Influence on the Mind in the Production of Dreams, Visions, Ghosts, and Other Supernatural Appearances. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2012.

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38

Newnham, W. Essay On Superstition: Being An Inquiry Into The Effects Of Physical Influence On The Mind. Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2007.

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39

Raynes, Brent, and Gregory Little. Grand Illusions: The Spectral Reality Underlying Sexual UFO Abductions, Crashed Saucers, Afterlife Experiences, Sacred Sites, & Other Enigmas. Advanced Training Associates, 2022.

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40

Stallings, L. H. Black Trans Narratives, Sex Work, and the Illusive Flesh. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5406/illinois/9780252039591.003.0008.

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This chapter considers how two writers—Toni Newman and Red Jordan Arobateau—rely on sex work, spirituality, and deconstructions of Western embodiment in order to theorize transgender subjectivity away from medical and classed models that do not account for race, culture, and pleasure. These black writers' fabrication of the transgender body serves as a spiritual decolonization to cease the continuous separation of spirit from body that Western embodiment perpetrates and that imperialists manipulated to enslave and terrorize. In their rough and explicit written narratives about sex work, Newman and Arobateau provide narrative representations of how unruly bodies can sometimes refuse to be transformed into the service of state power.
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41

Harding, Duncan. Communication skills. Edited by Duncan Harding. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198768197.003.0011.

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This chapter considers our communication skills in the interview and describes techniques to help communicate effectively with the interviewer. It starts by looking at the psychological context of communication, and then moves onto verbal communication, considering the way content is delivered in its conciseness, tone, and volume. It discusses depth and breadth of content and how to hint at a broader level of understanding in the interview without straying from the question. Our non-verbal communication and expression reflects our core underlying state and this theme is explored by considering body language and facial expression, appropriate language, signposting, and summarizing. The chapter discusses the illusion of structure and includes an exercise to improve our dissemination, accuracy, and fluency of speech. The chapter finishes by learning how to listen and thinking about what makes an expert communicator.
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42

Paint A 'Licious: The Pain-Free Way to Achieving Your Naked Ambitions. Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2005.

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43

Gair, Joanne. Paint A 'Licious: The Pain-Free Way to Achieving Your Naked Ambitions. Andrews McMeel Publishing, 2010.

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44

Onuf, Nicholas Greenwood. Epilogue. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190879808.003.0015.

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The last three chapters of the book have a constructivist flavor. One might wonder if constructivism could point to new conditions of thought and rule within the modern world’s mighty frame. If so, Bruno Latour’s extensive, ever more influential body of work bears attention. He has directly, energetically attacked “the dominion of modernism” and sketched a “political ecology” for the future; he made an ancillary project of “saving constructivism” from constructivists in order stabilize conditions of thought for the world to come. Unfortunately, society is missing from Latour’s project because people have no faculties that distinguish them from other “actants.” Untroubled by issues of agency, he has proposed that actants somehow adopt a constitution for a new cosmopolis. Latour has had important allies, include Haraway. As with Haraway, he is a technological optimist. The illusion of control comes in many guises; saving modernity will not be so easy.
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45

Preiss, Richard. Interiority. Edited by Henry S. Turner. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199641352.013.3.

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This chapter traces the history of theatrical interiority and shows when and why early modern theatre became invested in it. More specifically, it examines the way the enclosure of the theatres made possible not only a newly commercialized drama but also characterization and plot-structure that depended on an implied but unrevealed depth. The chapter first considers the analogy between round amphitheatres and ‘round’, complex characters before discussing the culture of the money box to establish the link between early modern theatrical economics and its aesthetics. It then looks at the play’s resistance to closure, its messiness and overcomplication, and the ‘interiority’ of its characters and how characters in later revenge plays construct interiority as negative space. It argues that characters are not people so much as playhouses, propagating the illusion of depth after depth has run out, and explains how ‘interiority’ in the early modern theatre begins as merely its exterior reinscribed—its circle reduced into the body of the actor until it became a point, elemental and ‘inviolate’.
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46

Paisley Girl: A Novel. St. Martin's Griffin, 2000.

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47

Rosenfeld, Edward, and Andrew Weil. Book of Highs: 250 Activities for Altering Your Consciousness Without Drugs. Workman Publishing Company, Incorporated, 2018.

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48

Rosenfeld, Edward, and Andrew Weil. Book of Highs: 255 Ways to Alter Your Consciousness Without Drugs. Workman Publishing Company, Incorporated, 2018.

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49

Human Canvas. 21st Editions, Incorporated, 2020.

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50

Schmeink, Lars. Individuality, Choice, and Genetic Manipulation. Liverpool University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5949/liverpool/9781781383766.003.0005.

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Chapter 5 deals with the personal consequences of a posthuman subjectivity and the task of identity creation. In liquid modernity, risks and threats are becoming ever more global but remain systemic, while at the same time the solutions to these issues is relegated to the individual. The existence of a noticeable gap between society's insistence on individuality, autonomy, and self-assertion and the systemic risks to this claim, caused by a globalized flow of information, technology and politics, is thus the argument of the analysis of the video game BioShock. Science fiction as a genre here allows for the extrapolation and exaggeration of this gap by employing the posthuman as an extreme possibility of human identity creation. The dystopian imagination provides a bleak emphasis of the science-fictional dimension of consequence in terms of this development, by providing an alternative history in which rampant individualism meets an extreme form of consumer society. The human body has become the battleground of liquid modern desires to form and consume identities. Further, the medium uniquely provides the specific ideological commentary on the systemic nature of the illusion of autonomy, especially in liquid modern consumer society.
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