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Surfing Uncertainty
Book

Surfing Uncertainty

Prediction, Action, and the Embodied Mind

Oxford UP, 2015
First Edition: 2015 more...


Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Analytical
  • Innovative
  • Scientific

Recommendation

The human brain is only meat. The enigma has always been how a mere hunk of matter can be conscious, and can reason, create, fantasize and feel. At least one of the crucial answers is that, in a chaotic, uncertain world in constant flux, the brain learned to predict. Prediction fuels a variety of mental states, including perceiving and imagining, and the intentions that lead to our actions are expressions of these mechanisms. A complicated web of neurological connections at a variety of levels generates these predictions – probabilistic assessments of the immediate future. The “predictive processing (PP)” theory offers an intriguing perspective on the way the human brain interacts with the world.

Take-Aways

  • The brain makes predictions based on an incoming torrent of sensory information.
  • Humans adjust their perceptual processing to better distinguish “signal” from “noise.”
  • Prediction opens up a world of imaginative construction.

About the Author

Professor of cognitive philosophy at the University of Sussex Andrew Clark also authored Supersizing the Mind: Embodiment, Action, and Cognitive Extension.