Nonlinear Dynamics, Psychology, and Life Sciences, Vol. 11, Iss. 1, Jan, 2007, pp. 51-90 @2007 Society for Chaos Theory in Psychology & Life Sciences Complexity and Cognition: A Meta-Theoretical Analysis of the Mind and Brain as a Topological Dynamical System Abstract: The application of theories of complexity to the
study of cognition has only recently started but it has already
caused high expectations and controversies. Currently an
extensive evaluation of the theoretical status of these
theories does not exist. In an attempt to fill in that gap,
this text develops a meta-theoretical analysis that presents
a reconstruction of the theories of complexity applied to
cognition, establishing their theoretical status, conceptual
cores, basic assumptions and explanation strategies. Freeman s
theory of cerebral chaos will be analyzed first. Then a meta-theory
generalization to neuro-cognitive theories will be presented. It
will be sustained that the central theoretical core of cognitive
complexity theories are based on the metaphor of the mind, the
brain or cognition as a dynamic system, founded a time-space
topology. The framework of this study is based on ontology of
processes and an ontological pluralism. The explicative strategies
are supported by emergentistic approaches and nomological
derivation based on mathematical laws. The prototypes of the
theory are strongly backed up by computer simulations. This paper
concludes by suggesting the existence of two antagonical perspectives
(universalistic and pluralistic) in the core of these theories. Keywords: chaos theory, complexity theory, brain dynamics, dynamic approach to cognition, meta-theoretical analysis |