A Drive to Survive: The Free Energy Principle and the Meaning of Life
How the purposive behavior of living systems outstrips the constraints of the free energy principle.


Since 2005, Karl Friston’s proposal that the principle of free energy minimization underpins the purposive behavior of living agents has evolved throughout thousands of publications. This principle’s central move is to formalize the drive for self-preservation in terms of a single probabilistic imperative: to survive, a living system must consistently exhibit the same “most likely” pattern of activity over time. Despite the simplicity of this central claim, the free energy principle’s complexity and rate of development have previously made it difficult to identify and evaluate. In A Drive to Survive, Kathryn Nave offers an extended critical analysis of the strengths and limitations of Friston’s proposal.

Nave shows that the free energy principle’s capacity to account for the biological origins of purposiveness is undermined by its applicability to any stable inanimate system. As this triviality has become apparent, so advocates have begun to reframe the free energy principle as a means to eliminate, rather than explain, the notion of distinctively biological purposiveness. This, Nave proposes, gets things the wrong way around. The triviality of free energy minimization does not prove that there is no difference in kind between living agents and ordinary machines, but rather reflects that the framework cannot capture the intrinsic instability and unpredictability that distinguish the former.
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A Drive to Survive: The Free Energy Principle and the Meaning of Life
How the purposive behavior of living systems outstrips the constraints of the free energy principle.


Since 2005, Karl Friston’s proposal that the principle of free energy minimization underpins the purposive behavior of living agents has evolved throughout thousands of publications. This principle’s central move is to formalize the drive for self-preservation in terms of a single probabilistic imperative: to survive, a living system must consistently exhibit the same “most likely” pattern of activity over time. Despite the simplicity of this central claim, the free energy principle’s complexity and rate of development have previously made it difficult to identify and evaluate. In A Drive to Survive, Kathryn Nave offers an extended critical analysis of the strengths and limitations of Friston’s proposal.

Nave shows that the free energy principle’s capacity to account for the biological origins of purposiveness is undermined by its applicability to any stable inanimate system. As this triviality has become apparent, so advocates have begun to reframe the free energy principle as a means to eliminate, rather than explain, the notion of distinctively biological purposiveness. This, Nave proposes, gets things the wrong way around. The triviality of free energy minimization does not prove that there is no difference in kind between living agents and ordinary machines, but rather reflects that the framework cannot capture the intrinsic instability and unpredictability that distinguish the former.
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A Drive to Survive: The Free Energy Principle and the Meaning of Life

A Drive to Survive: The Free Energy Principle and the Meaning of Life

by Kathryn Nave
A Drive to Survive: The Free Energy Principle and the Meaning of Life

A Drive to Survive: The Free Energy Principle and the Meaning of Life

by Kathryn Nave

eBook

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Overview

How the purposive behavior of living systems outstrips the constraints of the free energy principle.


Since 2005, Karl Friston’s proposal that the principle of free energy minimization underpins the purposive behavior of living agents has evolved throughout thousands of publications. This principle’s central move is to formalize the drive for self-preservation in terms of a single probabilistic imperative: to survive, a living system must consistently exhibit the same “most likely” pattern of activity over time. Despite the simplicity of this central claim, the free energy principle’s complexity and rate of development have previously made it difficult to identify and evaluate. In A Drive to Survive, Kathryn Nave offers an extended critical analysis of the strengths and limitations of Friston’s proposal.

Nave shows that the free energy principle’s capacity to account for the biological origins of purposiveness is undermined by its applicability to any stable inanimate system. As this triviality has become apparent, so advocates have begun to reframe the free energy principle as a means to eliminate, rather than explain, the notion of distinctively biological purposiveness. This, Nave proposes, gets things the wrong way around. The triviality of free energy minimization does not prove that there is no difference in kind between living agents and ordinary machines, but rather reflects that the framework cannot capture the intrinsic instability and unpredictability that distinguish the former.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262381666
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 02/04/2025
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 318

About the Author

Kathryn Nave is a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellow at the University of Edinburgh working on the biological roots of agency, autonomy, and intelligence. Outside of academia, she has worked as a science and technology journalist for outlets including WIRED, The Guardian, The Economist, & The New Statesman.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“A game-changer for cognitive science, this outstanding book combines a lucid exposition of the notoriously abstruse free energy principle, a forceful account of its limitations as a theory of living systems, and a robust case for the enactive theory of biological autonomy.”
—Evan Thompson, author of Mind in Life; coauthor of The Embodied Mind and The Blind Spot
 
“In this ground-breaking treatment, Kate Nave asks what’s special about living organizations—what distinguishes us from other systems such computers or other kinds of complex systems? In so doing, she sheds new and important light on both the promise and the inherent limitations of leading approaches to understanding mind and its place in nature. This beautifully written book contains important lessons for all those interested in minds, brains, and action.”
—Andy Clark, Professor of Cognitive Philosophy, University of Sussex; author of The Experience Machine: How Our Minds Predict and Shape Reality

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