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| Auteur principal: | |
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| Format: | Recurso digital |
| Langue: | anglais |
| Publié: |
Zenodo
2026
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| Sujets: | |
| Accès en ligne: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18646482 |
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- <p><span lang="EN-US">For millennia, </span><span lang="EN-US">the mind-body problem remained a philosophical issue without an empirical basis and practical implications. In recent decades, natural science has finally started to treat the mind as an object of research. The main approach was to study the ‘neural correlates of consciousness’. Since then, we have accumulated a vast amount of data on neural processes that appear to correlate with observed mental phenomena. However, the explanatory gap between mental and physical is not covered, as the main questions about the mind remain unanswered. What is the mind? What does it do? Why does it do it? How does it do it? The article reviews a theory that aims to answer these phenomenological, functional, teleological, and causal questions from the physical perspective. The theory elucidates physical processes and mechanisms that give rise to mental phenomena in the brain, thus enabling neuroscience to progress from correlational descriptions to an explanation of the physical causes of the mind and solve the mind-body problem.</span></p>