Vision as Adaptive Epistemology
Ignazio Licata

TL;DR
This paper explores the role of vision in understanding complex systems and knowledge formation, proposing a new logical openness theory linked to intrinsic emergence and the observer's role.
Contribution
It introduces the Logical Openness Theory as an extension of Godel theorems, clarifies notions of emergence, and connects vision to epistemological processes.
Findings
Clarifies the concepts of computational and intrinsic emergence.
Proposes the Logical Openness Theory as an extension of Godel theorems.
Highlights the analogy between vision and knowledge construction.
Abstract
In the last years the debate on complexity has been developing and developing in transdisciplinary way to meet the need of explanation for highly organized collective behaviors and sophisticated hierarchical arrangements in physical, biological, cognitive and social systems. Unfortunately, no clear definition has been reached, so complexity appears like an anti-reductionist paradigm in search of a theory. In our short survey we aim to suggest a clarification in relation to the notions of computational and intrinsic emergence, and to show how the latter is deeply connected to the new Logical Openness Theory, an original extension of Godel theorems to the model theory. The epistemological scenario we are going to make use of is that of the theory of vision, a particularly instructive one. Vision is an element of our primordial relationship with the world;consequently it comes as no…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeural dynamics and brain function · Memory and Neural Mechanisms
