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Neurophenomenology of surprise

Michel Bitbol

Consciousness & Emotion Book Series November 6, 2019 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1075/ceb.11.01bit

Summary

A recent thermodynamic theory of the central nervous system proposes that its function is to minimize surprise, thereby maintaining viability by adapting internal organization or ecological niche to maximize predictability and minimize entropy. The first-person correlate of this state of minimal surprise is plausibly déjà vu or habitual monotony. In contrast, philosopher Henri Maldiney argues that surprise is a sudden encounter with reality, radically unexpected, a risk for the living being but also an awakening to what exists.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding The first-person correlate of the nervous system's minimization of surprise is plausibly déjà vu or monotony, while surprise itself is a sudden encounter with reality and an awakening.

Abstract

Abstract A theory of the central nervous system was formulated recently, in general thermodynamical terms. According to it, the function of a central nervous system, and more generally of living autopoietic units, is to minimize “surprise”. The nervous system fulfills its task, and the animal maintains its viability, by changing their inner organization or their ecological niche so as to maximize the predictability of what happens to them, and to minimize the correlative production of entropy. But what is the first-person correlate of this third-person description of the adaptation of living beings? What is the phenomenological counterpart of this state of minimal suprise? A plausible answer is that it amounts to a state of “déjà vu”, or to the monotony of habit. By contrast, says Henri Maldiney, surprise is lived as a sudden encounter with reality, a reality that is recognized as such because it is radically unexpected. Surprise is a concussion for the brain, it is a risk for a living being, but it can be lived in the first person as an awakening to what there is.

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