The embodied transcendental: a Kantian perspective on neurophenomenology.
Omar T Khachouf, Stefano Poletti, Giuseppe Pagnoni
Frontiers in human neuroscience January 1, 2013 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00611 via PubMed
Summary
The proposal explores how the bodily basis of the mind relates to consciousness and intentionality, suggesting that this relationship is rooted in biology. It builds on Kant's ideas about the a priori structures of the mind and connects them to biological systems like the mirror-neuron system and the default mode network. The study emphasizes that first-person experiences are essential for understanding brain function, and it discusses how meditation may contribute to this understanding.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | The argument suggests that the transcendental core of human knowledge may be biologically rooted and that lived first-person experience is crucial for understanding brain function. |
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Abstract
Neurophenomenology is a research programme aimed at bridging the explanatory gap between first-person subjective experience and neurophysiological third-person data, through an embodied and enactive approach to the biology of consciousness. The present proposal attempts to further characterize the bodily basis of the mind by adopting a naturalistic view of the phenomenological concept of intentionality as the a priori invariant character of any lived experience. Building on the Kantian definition of transcendentality as "what concerns the a priori formal structures of the subject's mind" and as a precondition for the very possibility of human knowledge, we will suggest that this transcendental core may in fact be rooted in biology and can be examined within an extension of the theory of autopoiesis. The argument will be first clarified by examining its application to previously proposed elementary autopoietic models, to the bacterium, and to the immune system; it will be then further substantiated and illustrated by examining the mirror-neuron system and the default mode network as biological instances exemplifying the enactive nature of knowledge, and by discussing the phenomenological aspects of selected neurological conditions (neglect, schizophrenia). In this context, the free-energy principle proposed recently by Karl Friston will be briefly introduced as a rigorous, neurally-plausible framework that seems to accomodate optimally these ideas. While our approach is biologically-inspired, we will maintain that lived first-person experience is still critical for a better understanding of brain function, based on our argument that the former and the latter share the same transcendental structure. Finally, the role that disciplined contemplative practices can play to this aim, and an interpretation of the cognitive processes taking place during meditation under this perspective, will be also discussed.