Go to journal home page - Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology

Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology

 • 

Integral Biomathics: Life Sciences, Mathematics, and Phenomenological Philosophy

Edited by
  • Dr. Plamen L. Simeonov
  • Dr. Steven M. Rosen
  • Dr. Arran Gare
Volume 119, Issue 3,

Pages 205-734 (December 2015)

Actions for selected articles

/

Contents

Receive an update when the latest issues in this journal are published
Sign in to set up alerts
    1. Editorial Board/Publication/Advertising info.

      Page IFC
      View PDF
    1. Mathematics and biology: The ultimate interface?

      Pages 205-207
    1. Editorial

      Pages 208-217
  1. I. Introduction

    1. Beyond Descartes and Newton: Recovering life and humanity

      Pages 219-244
    2. “Menaced Rationality”: Husserl and Merleau-Ponty on the Crisis and Promise of Science

      Pages 245-256
    3. Why natural science needs phenomenological philosophy

      Pages 257-269
  2. II. Physics, Phenomenology & Consciousnes

    1. Yet another time about time … Part I: An essay on the phenomenology of physical time

      Pages 271-287
    2. A complexity basis for phenomenology: How information states at criticality offer a new approach to understanding experience of self, being and time

      Pages 288-302
    3. A new kind of relativity: Compensated delays as phenomenal blind spots

      Pages 303-312
    4. On the physics of the emergence of sensorimotor control in the absence of the brain

      Pages 313-323
    5. Heideggerian dynamics and the monadological role of the ‘between’: A crossing with quantum brain dynamics

      Pages 324-331
    6. The quantum epoché

      Pages 332-340
  3. III. Mathematics, Computation & Phenomenology

    1. Doing the math: Calculating the role of evolution and enculturation in the origins of geometrical and mathematical reasoning

      Pages 341-346
    2. Conciliating neuroscience and phenomenology via category theory

      Pages 347-359
    3. Proof phenomenon as a function of the phenomenology of proving

      Pages 360-367
    4. The universal numbers. From Biology to Physics

      Pages 368-381
    5. Self-reference, biologic and the structure of reproduction

      Pages 382-409
    6. Living science: Science as an activity of living beings

      Pages 410-419
    7. Pragmatic phenomenological types

      Pages 420-436
    8. Peirce's cenopythagorean categories, Merleau-Ponty's chiasmatic entrelacs and Grothendieck's Résumé

      Pages 437-441
    9. Mathematics and mysticism

      Pages 442-452
    10. The mysterious connection between mathematics and physics

      Pages 453-459
  4. IV. Biology, Phenomenology & Nature

    1. Cell phenomenology: The first phenomenon

      Pages 461-468
    2. How the living is in the world: An inquiry into the informational choreographies of life

      Pages 469-480
    3. Towards a heterarchical approach to biology and cognition

      Pages 481-492
    4. Phenomenology and the life sciences: Clarifications and complementarities

      Pages 493-501
    5. Overcoming parallelism: Naturalizing phenomenology with goldstein and Merleau-Ponty

      Pages 502-509
    6. What does the closure of context-sensitive constraints mean for determinism, autonomy, self-determination, and agency?

      Pages 510-521
    7. From creativity to perception: The conditions of possibility for a true biology

      Pages 522-529
    8. Situated phenomenology and biological systems: Eastern and Western synthesis

      Pages 530-537
    9. Is it ethical to heal a young white elephant from his physiological autism?

      Pages 539-543
    10. Emotional sentience and the nature of phenomenal experience

      Pages 545-562
  5. V. (Bio) Semiotics, Information & Phenomenology

    1. Naturalizing semiotics: The triadic sign of Charles Sanders Peirce as a systems property

      Pages 563-575
    2. Can biosemiotics be a “science” if its purpose is to be a bridge between the natural, social and human sciences?

      Pages 576-587
    3. Creation of the relevant next: How living systems capture the power of the adjacent possible through sign use

      Pages 588-601
    4. Signs, dispositions, and semiotic scaffolding

      Pages 602-606
    5. Semiotic individuation and Ernst Cassirer's challenge

      Pages 607-615
    6. Semiosis stems from logical incompatibility in organic nature: Why biophysics does not see meaning, while biosemiotics does

      Pages 616-621
    7. Finding an information concept suited for a universal theory of information

      Pages 622-633
    8. Biologically inspired information theory: Adaptation through construction of external reality models by living systems

      Pages 634-648
    9. Re-live and learn – Interlocutor-induced elicitation of phenomenal experiences in learning offline

      Pages 649-660
    10. Naturalizing phenomenology – A philosophical imperative

      Pages 661-669
  6. VI. Supplement

    1. Free will: A case study in reconciling phenomenological philosophy with reductionist sciences

      Pages 671-727
    2. Integral Biomathics reloaded: 2015

      Pages 728-733
      View PDF

ISSN: 0079-6107