Brain and Being: At the boundary between science, philosophy, language and artsGordon G. Globus, Karl H. Pribram, Giuseppe Vitiello John Benjamins Publishing, 17 ¡.Â. 2004 - 350 ˹éÒ This book results from a group meeting held at the Institute for Scientific Exchange in Torino, Italy. The central aim was for scientists to think together in new ways with those in the humanities inspired by quantum theory and especially quantum brain theory. These fields of inquiry have suffered conceptual estrangement but now are ripe for rapprochement, if academic parochialism is put aside. A prevalent theme of the book is a moving away from individual elements and individual actors acting upon each other, toward a coordinate hermeneutic dynamics that manifests as a coherent totality. Among the topics covered are image in photography and in neuroscience; language; time; brain and mathematics; quantum brain dynamics and quantum communication. |
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˹éÒ 2
... meaning is not here but actually elsewhere — hence a duplication of the event which splits itself into two elements: its imme— diate expression and what this expression expresses, i.e. its meaning” (Rosset. 1984: 76). It is uncertain ...
... meaning is not here but actually elsewhere — hence a duplication of the event which splits itself into two elements: its imme— diate expression and what this expression expresses, i.e. its meaning” (Rosset. 1984: 76). It is uncertain ...
˹éÒ 3
... meaning proximity generates. Even if each unit is divided up in smaller elements (mini-units) and the construction becomes, by juxtaposing these elements, more complicated, each unit contributes to a system of proximity. The first unit ...
... meaning proximity generates. Even if each unit is divided up in smaller elements (mini-units) and the construction becomes, by juxtaposing these elements, more complicated, each unit contributes to a system of proximity. The first unit ...
˹éÒ 10
... meaning in the inserts and within the complexity of the inserts' insert. And so on, until I understood that, maybe, the end-result would not be an image but rather a disturbing opening created by the arrival of another image. When two ...
... meaning in the inserts and within the complexity of the inserts' insert. And so on, until I understood that, maybe, the end-result would not be an image but rather a disturbing opening created by the arrival of another image. When two ...
˹éÒ 11
... meaning the operation behind delaying that cracks and delays presence. The image and the origin of its doubles The fact that the primal enigma is the enigma of the scene that brought us into existence does not prevent another enigma to ...
... meaning the operation behind delaying that cracks and delays presence. The image and the origin of its doubles The fact that the primal enigma is the enigma of the scene that brought us into existence does not prevent another enigma to ...
˹éÒ 15
... meaning of things which, for it, represents a double absence: the absence of the image of the origin and the absence of origin of the image which, because of its technicality, it gives the illusion to catch. We know that photography is ...
... meaning of things which, for it, represents a double absence: the absence of the image of the origin and the absence of origin of the image which, because of its technicality, it gives the illusion to catch. We know that photography is ...
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1 | |
23 | |
31 | |
49 | |
5 The psychoemotionalphysical unity of living organisms as an outcome of quantum physics | 71 |
6 Dual mode ontology and its application to the Riemann Hypothesis | 89 |
7 Quantum monadology and consciousness | 113 |
8 Quantum connectionism and the emergence of cognition | 129 |
12 Brain and mathematics | 217 |
13 Searching for the biophysics of an elementary system | 243 |
14 Brain and physics of manybody problems | 257 |
15 Quantum Brain Dynamics and Quantum Field Theory | 269 |
16 Brain and Quantum Field Theory | 293 |
17 The dissipative brain | 317 |
Name index | 339 |
Subject index | 343 |
9 The rheomode of language of David Bohm as a way to reconstruct the access to physical reality | 149 |
10 Can quantum analogies help us to understand the process of thought? | 167 |
11 Information quantum theory and the brain | 199 |
List of the contributors | 353 |
The series Advances in Consciousness Research | 355 |
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analogies aspects atomic ingredients behavior biological Bohm Bohm’s bosons brain tissue classical physics coherent concept connectionism consciousness consider correlation corticon field defined definite described difficult dissipative domain dual mode electric dipole field emergence energy entities equation existence external world find first fits flow fluctuations fundamental system Giudice Globus Goldstone Goldstone bosons Hamiltonian Hiley Iibu infinite input interaction interpretation living matter macroscopic mathematical meaning memory mental presence mind molecules monadology monads neural neurons nonclassical observed ontological paradigm particles perception phase space phenomena photographic physical process possible present Pribram problem protein filaments quantum brain dynamics quantum field theory quantum mechanics quantum model quantum physics quantum processes quantum statistical mechanics quantum theory reality reflective relation rheomode Riemann zeta function scientific significance soliton specific spontaneous spontaneous symmetry breaking structure system of corticons theoretical thought process tion Umezawa University vacuum variables Vitiello Yasue