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Alex Djedovic

Cognitive Science Program, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

2 papers in the library · 35 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Naturalizing relevance realization: why agency and cognition are fundamentally not computational.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2024 Johannes Jaeger, Anna Riedl, Alex Djedovic et al. 35 citations

Organisms solve problems in a way that fundamentally differs from algorithmic computation. Before an organism can apply logical rules, it must first determine what is relevant—turning ill-defined problems into well-defined ones. This ability to realize relevance is present in all living beings, from bacteria to humans, and arises from their autopoietic, anticipatory, and adaptive organization. The process of relevance realization cannot be fully captured by formal algorithms, implying that organismic agency, cognition, and consciousness are not computational in nature. Instead, relevance is realized through an adaptive, emergent triadic dialectic—a metabolic and ecological-evolutionary co-constructive dynamic—that allows an agent to continuously maintain a grip on its reality. Being alive means making sense of one's world through embodied ecological rationality, a key characteristic distinguishing life from non-living matter.

The Synergistic Mind-Body Hypothesis: A Daoist Approach to Consciousness from the Perspective of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Canadian Undergraduate Journal of Cognitive Science November 21, 2025 Darin Lei, Alex Djedovic

Consciousness arises from a synergistic and exaptive relationship between mind and body, according to the synergistically affectively interoceptively synchronizing mind-body hypothesis (SAIS). This system integrates highly adaptive interoceptive active inference with dynamic coordination of allostatic affective control and exteroception. Emerging research suggests parallels between the allostatic paradigm of predictive processing and the system of Qi in traditional Chinese medicine and Daoist conceptions of consciousness, indicating that the key to understanding consciousness may lie in revisiting fundamental processes such as allostasis, homeostasis, and autopoiesis.