| Literature DB >> 26640604 |
Abstract
Biological organisms appear to have agency, goals, and meaningful behaviour. One possibility is that this is mere appearance, where such properties are not real, but only 'as if' consequences of the physiological structure of organisms. Another possibility is that these properties are real, as emerging from the organism's structure and from how the organism interacts with its environment. Here I will discuss a recent theory showing that the latter position is most likely correct, and argue that the theory is largely consistent with the basics of the field of biosemiotics. The theory can be represented as a triad that resembles the semiotic triad proposed by Peirce, which connects a sign with its object through a process of interpretation. In the theory presented, the sign is an internalized version of fitness (i.e., expected reproductive rate) which refers to the true fitness through a feedback loop that in effect produces interpretation. The feedback loop entangles deterministic and stochastic forms of causation in such a way that genuine agency, goal-directedness, and their associated meaning emerge. It produces a strong form of emergence not reducible to its constituents. The result is that novel phenomena arise that are real and necessary components for a complete understanding of living organisms.Entities:
Keywords: Agency; Causation; Emergence; Meaning; Peirce; Semiotics
Year: 2015 PMID: 26640604 PMCID: PMC4661186 DOI: 10.1007/s12304-015-9241-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosemiotics ISSN: 1875-1342 Impact factor: 0.711
Fig. 1Origin of agency and intrinsic meaning. a In deterministic causation, a time-varying variable (representing a system state or property) is caused by (left arrow) and causes (right arrow) other variables. b In stochastic causation, a random variable can start new chains of causation (arrow). c In modulated stochastic causation, a non-negative deterministic variable (left curve) drives the variance of a stochastic variable (right curve). d Behaviour of an organism ultimately depends on Darwinian fitness f true, which is assumed to be approximated by an internal estimate f est, made implicitly by the organism itself. It drives the variable component of behaviour that cannot be chosen based on previous learning. The mechanism is evolvable when low f est produces large variability and high f est small variability (symbolized by ~1/ f est). The reproductive loop R contributes to the population, which is part of an environment that affects the organism's fitness (arrow p). The active feedback loop A uses modulate stochastic causation (arrows 1–3 as in c) to gradually produce agency, and intrinsic meaning as embodied in the form of f est. Agency and meaning depend on feedback through the organism's environment (arrow s)
Fig. 2Semiosis. a Standard Peircian triad, where a sign (sign vehicle) is connected to its (semiotic) object through an interpretant, which interprets the sign and produces the meaning of the triad. b Tentative interpretation of the theory of Fig. 1d as a (primordial) semiotic triad, where the A loop interprets f est as an estimate of f true, resulting in enhanced fitness and the emergence of agency and meaning