Publication | Closed Access
SELF: AN ADAPTIVE PRESSURE ARISING FROM SELF-ORGANIZATION, CHAOTIC DYNAMICS, AND NEURAL DARWINISM
30
Citations
39
References
2007
Year
Affective NeuroscienceSocial SciencesPsychologySelf-organizing SystemNeurodynamicsCognitive NeuroscienceConsciousnessEvolutionary DynamicAnd Neural DarwinismCognitive ScienceChaos TheorySelf-awarenessNeurophilosophyBrain Making RecourseEmergent PhenomenonPattern FormationChaotic DynamicsComputational NeuroscienceNeuroscienceArtificial ConsciousnessFunctional ConnectivityMedicineSelf-organizationPhilosophy Of Mind
In this article, we establish a model to delineate the emergence of "self" in the brain making recourse to the theory of chaos. Self is considered as the subjective experience of a subject. As essential ingredients of subjective experiences, our model includes wakefulness, re-entry, attention, memory, and proto-experiences. The stability as stated by chaos theory can potentially describe the non-linear function of "self" as sensitive to initial conditions and can characterize it as underlying order from apparently random signals. Self-similarity is discussed as a latent menace of a pathological confusion between "self" and "others". Our test hypothesis is that (1) consciousness might have emerged and evolved from a primordial potential or proto-experience in matter, such as the physical attractions and repulsions experienced by electrons, and (2) "self" arises from chaotic dynamics, self-organization and selective mechanisms during ontogenesis, while emerging post-ontogenically as an adaptive pressure driven by both volume and synaptic-neural transmission and influencing the functional connectivity of neural nets (structure).
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