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John Vervaeke

Department of Psychology, 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.

Scientific, Philosophical, and Practical Elements of Two New Philosophical Group Practices: Dialectic into Dialogos and the Socratic Search Space

Interdisciplinary Research in Counseling Ethics and Philosophy - IRCEP December 24, 2025 John Vervaeke, Rick Repetti, Christopher Mastropietro et al.

Two group philosophical practices—Dialectic into Dialogos (DiD) and the Socratic Search Space (SSS)—are described and contrasted with Nelsonian Socratic Dialogue (NSD). NSD aims for consensus by extracting a virtue concept from personal experiences, then testing it through Socratic questioning, making it a 'cataphatic' or positive practice. DiD instead leads participants into aporetic engagement with a virtue concept, making it 'apophatic' or negative. SSS integrates elements of both, balancing cataphatic and apophatic approaches. DiD and SSS are designed to induce dialogical flow states (Dialogos) that afford transformative experiences of distributed cognition, described by practitioners as a 'secular séance' that ignites Heraclitus's metaphorical fire associated with Logos, the intelligibility of ultimate reality. The paper presents cognitive science, philosophical, and practical supports, ethical considerations, and relevance amid the AI revolution and meaning crisis.