Algorithm of the Mind: Teleological Transduction Theory
Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary field that focuses on the study of the Mind. However, none of the disciplines within this field provides a clear definition of the research object. Some researchers believe that it is impossible to define the Mind. Some think that the problem is too hard. Some are satisfied with the tautology that the Mind is a set of mental phenomena. Some say that we should not risk giving a specific definition because we do not have enough knowledge, and prefer to wait for someone else to do it sometime in the future. So far, the consensus is that the Mind should be studied on various levels of analysis which are usually called computational, algorithmic, representational, and implementational. To put it simply, we should understand what the Mind does, why it does, and how it does. These are questions for the scientific study of any phenomenon. They are usually called functional, teleological, and causal questions. However, before we can get to those levels, we have to build a foundation by answering the phenomenological question of what we study. Without it, all other levels of analysis hang in the air, and the Mind remains a mystery. For a scientific solution to the mystery, the definition of the Mind as a basic hypothesis about the object of study must be formulated in physical terms and, thus, testable and potentially refutable or confirmable. In this volume of the "Symphony of Matter and Mind" project, the author takes the physical and biophysical foundation laid down in the previous volumes concerning the questions about Matter and proceeds to answer the questions about the Mind from a physical perspective. Taking the risk, the proposed theory starts by giving a precise physical definition of the research object and based on this foundation develops computational, algorithmic, representational, and implementational levels in this and the following volumes. The road is long but it cannot be covered without a first step.
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Algorithm of the Mind: Teleological Transduction Theory
Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary field that focuses on the study of the Mind. However, none of the disciplines within this field provides a clear definition of the research object. Some researchers believe that it is impossible to define the Mind. Some think that the problem is too hard. Some are satisfied with the tautology that the Mind is a set of mental phenomena. Some say that we should not risk giving a specific definition because we do not have enough knowledge, and prefer to wait for someone else to do it sometime in the future. So far, the consensus is that the Mind should be studied on various levels of analysis which are usually called computational, algorithmic, representational, and implementational. To put it simply, we should understand what the Mind does, why it does, and how it does. These are questions for the scientific study of any phenomenon. They are usually called functional, teleological, and causal questions. However, before we can get to those levels, we have to build a foundation by answering the phenomenological question of what we study. Without it, all other levels of analysis hang in the air, and the Mind remains a mystery. For a scientific solution to the mystery, the definition of the Mind as a basic hypothesis about the object of study must be formulated in physical terms and, thus, testable and potentially refutable or confirmable. In this volume of the "Symphony of Matter and Mind" project, the author takes the physical and biophysical foundation laid down in the previous volumes concerning the questions about Matter and proceeds to answer the questions about the Mind from a physical perspective. Taking the risk, the proposed theory starts by giving a precise physical definition of the research object and based on this foundation develops computational, algorithmic, representational, and implementational levels in this and the following volumes. The road is long but it cannot be covered without a first step.
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Algorithm of the Mind: Teleological Transduction Theory

Algorithm of the Mind: Teleological Transduction Theory

by Stanislav Tregub
Algorithm of the Mind: Teleological Transduction Theory

Algorithm of the Mind: Teleological Transduction Theory

by Stanislav Tregub

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Overview

Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary field that focuses on the study of the Mind. However, none of the disciplines within this field provides a clear definition of the research object. Some researchers believe that it is impossible to define the Mind. Some think that the problem is too hard. Some are satisfied with the tautology that the Mind is a set of mental phenomena. Some say that we should not risk giving a specific definition because we do not have enough knowledge, and prefer to wait for someone else to do it sometime in the future. So far, the consensus is that the Mind should be studied on various levels of analysis which are usually called computational, algorithmic, representational, and implementational. To put it simply, we should understand what the Mind does, why it does, and how it does. These are questions for the scientific study of any phenomenon. They are usually called functional, teleological, and causal questions. However, before we can get to those levels, we have to build a foundation by answering the phenomenological question of what we study. Without it, all other levels of analysis hang in the air, and the Mind remains a mystery. For a scientific solution to the mystery, the definition of the Mind as a basic hypothesis about the object of study must be formulated in physical terms and, thus, testable and potentially refutable or confirmable. In this volume of the "Symphony of Matter and Mind" project, the author takes the physical and biophysical foundation laid down in the previous volumes concerning the questions about Matter and proceeds to answer the questions about the Mind from a physical perspective. Taking the risk, the proposed theory starts by giving a precise physical definition of the research object and based on this foundation develops computational, algorithmic, representational, and implementational levels in this and the following volumes. The road is long but it cannot be covered without a first step.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940186573029
Publisher: Stanislav Tregub
Publication date: 03/21/2023
Series: Symphony of Matter and Mind , #4
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Independent researcher.
Research areas: physics, biophysics, neuroscience, psychology, psychiatry.
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