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the Author strongly feels the still immeasurable gapexisting between the todays comprehensible neurophysiologyconcerning somatic and autonomic functions, on the one hand,and the still incomprehensible properties of mind - whenapproached in the same neurophysiological term- on the otherhand. For this reason, the book is first aiming at given anunderstandable, critically viewed, fundament on the"kernel" of mind:the ideas, their relationship with thecorresponding concepts, with the development of thought ,with memory, with will.In this book, the Author does not advance neurophysioligalmodels to put to test, rather, strives to encase theforementioned mind's functional properties and its abstractstructures within the same reference framework of physicalprinciples outlined for the somatic and autonomic functionsin his preceding volume PRINCIPLES OF THEORETICALNEUROPHYSIOLOGY (Springer, 1987.)
Sommario
Rationale.- I Problems of Mind.- 1 General Observations on Thought.- 2 Knowledge and Mind.- II Problems of Thought.- 3 Modes of Thought.- III Eidetic Dynamics.- 4 Physics of Eidetic Motion.- 5 Logic, Will, and Eidetic Function.- 6 Resumé and Comments.- IV Ideas.- 7 Stored Ideas: An Approach to Memory.- 8 Ontogenesis of Ideas.- V Origins of the Eidetic Function: Concepts and Language.- 9 Consciousness, Awareness, and Conscience.- 10 Time-Unrelated Regions.- References.
Riassunto
the Author strongly feels the still immeasurable gap
existing between the todays comprehensible neurophysiology
concerning somatic and autonomic functions, on the one hand,
and the still incomprehensible properties of mind - when
approached in the same neurophysiological term- on the other
hand. For this reason, the book is first aiming at given an
understandable, critically viewed, fundament on the
"kernel" of mind:the ideas, their relationship with the
corresponding concepts, with the development of thought ,
with memory, with will.
In this book, the Author does not advance neurophysioligal
models to put to test, rather, strives to encase the
forementioned mind's functional properties and its abstract
structures within the same reference framework of physical
principles outlined for the somatic and autonomic functions
in his preceding volume PRINCIPLES OF THEORETICAL
NEUROPHYSIOLOGY (Springer, 1987.)