cotarded, you would be a welcome addition. It's to be expected that everyone will have a pretty widely varying range of knowledge and experience with the kind of topics we'll be discussing. I'd say the only strong requirements are an enthusiasm for learning about and discussing mind/brain topics, and also a willingness to put in the time and effort to contribute.
It seems like we're approaching an acceptable number of contributors, so I think we can begin discussing some of the surrounding issues regarding the club, a number of which were touched upon in cotarded's post.
One thing is journal access. Once again, it's to be expected that different people will have varying degrees of access to journal resources. Optimally everyone would have a chance to read a given paper before the 'official' discussion thread on it is started, but practically speaking we can't expect everyone to be able to access every paper, and I don't think we should restrict the scope of what we can cover by only using articles that we're sure everyone can access. So we'll have to make do with what we can. We could begin by pooling together links for some free, publically available resources like the kind selfAdjoint mentioned so that everyone at least has some easily accessible resources to draw from if needed. (Some resources like this are already listed in the stickied M&B references thread.)
Another thing to talk about is how we should organize this. Originally I was thinking of a fairly structured setup where we would know some time in advance who would be presenting what article on what day, and we'd limit ourselves to one presentation per week so we could really focus on each article as it comes. (To help organize all this, I could create a stickied thread that keeps a running tab of who has presented/will present what articles at what times, with links to the relevant threads for past discussions.)
I definitely think we should still plan in advance who is presenting what on what day to give everyone time to track down and read the relevant articles. But perhaps we could loosen up the structure to the extent that we can have variable numbers of presentations per week, or variable orders in who presents when, or whatever. I think it would be valuable to have ample time before and after a presentation to really digest a given paper and then really be able to focus in on it discussion-wise, but I can also see merits behind flexibility as well. Thoughts on how we should do this would be appreciated. It would be best if we could strike on something that works for everyone, and of course we can tweak things as we go along if necessary.