Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

ISCS 2013: Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex SystemsThe Brain Equation

ISCS 2013: Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex Systems: The Brain Equation [The brain equation is a solution to the “second survival problem.” The latter is called “positional adaptation.” It unlike Darwin’s first (“metabolic adaptation”) is history-independent. As such it is mathematically well posed. The equation applies to all life forms in the cosmos that live in a structured environment in which survival depends on position in space in a short-term fashion. An eusocial version does not exist. The equation solves, in conjunction with the necessarily attached VR machine, the famous NP-complete “decision-type travelling salesman problem” for finite times. The resulting autonomous optimizer with cognition is susceptible to a “function change” in the sense of Bob Rosen which so far is known empirically only from the human brain.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

ISCS 2013: Interdisciplinary Symposium on Complex SystemsThe Brain Equation

Part of the Emergence, Complexity and Computation Book Series (volume 8)
Editors: Sanayei, Ali; Zelinka, Ivan; Rössler, Otto E.

Loading next page...
 
/lp/springer-journals/iscs-2013-interdisciplinary-symposium-on-complex-systems-the-brain-IcNOKDOU0D
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Copyright
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2014
ISBN
978-3-642-45437-0
Pages
47 –56
DOI
10.1007/978-3-642-45438-7_5
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[The brain equation is a solution to the “second survival problem.” The latter is called “positional adaptation.” It unlike Darwin’s first (“metabolic adaptation”) is history-independent. As such it is mathematically well posed. The equation applies to all life forms in the cosmos that live in a structured environment in which survival depends on position in space in a short-term fashion. An eusocial version does not exist. The equation solves, in conjunction with the necessarily attached VR machine, the famous NP-complete “decision-type travelling salesman problem” for finite times. The resulting autonomous optimizer with cognition is susceptible to a “function change” in the sense of Bob Rosen which so far is known empirically only from the human brain.]

Published: Feb 16, 2014

Keywords: Brain equation; Second darwinism; Decision-type travelling-salesman problem; Deductive biology; A.I.; Epigenetic personogenetic function change; Robert Rosen; Gödel incompleteness.

There are no references for this article.