Embodiments of Mind teems with intriguing concepts about the mind/brain that are highly relevant to current developments in neuroscience and neural networks.
Here is embodied mind cognitive science in its earliest form, essays from the mid-1940s to the mid-1960s by MIT scholar Warren McCulloch on mind, nature, the brain, and body. These were the early days of general system theory and cybernetics, when feedback mechanisms were first being understood in the "control and communication" of living organisms. McCulloch was among the pioneers of early embodiment of mind studies along with the many systems theorists and cyberneticists Ludwig Von Bertalanffy, Heinz Von Foerster, Stafford Beer, John Von Neumann, Humberto Maturana, Herbert Simon, Norbert Wiener, Ross Ashby, Ervin Laszlo, Erich Jantsch, many many others, and of course, Gregory Bateson and James Gibson - two important pioneers of the early embodied mind paradigm.
This is a book of essays by McCulloch and many also by his close colleague Walter Pitts on issues dealing with brain, mind, body, and environment. These essays are mostly of historical interest since so much has changed since they were written. Nonetheless, they're worthy of seeing where scientific approaches to mind/nature studies were in the early post-war period.
Here is a list of other books exploring the history of and early approaches to embodied cognition and complex systems: