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"Kauffman has a very ambitious agenda here: to debunk the reductionist critique of ideas generally associated with religious belief (e.g. the sacred) using the paradigm of complexity theory and emergent phenomena." — Feb 14, 2012 02:08PM
"Kauffman has a very ambitious agenda here: to debunk the reductionist critique of ideas generally associated with religious belief (e.g. the sacred) using the paradigm of complexity theory and emergent phenomena." — Feb 14, 2012 02:08PM

“Asking where memory is "located" in the brain is like asking where running is located in the body. There are certainly parts of the body that are more important (the legs) or less important (the little fingers) in performing the task of running but, in the end, it is an activity that requires complex coordination among a great many body parts and muscle groups. To extend the analogy, looking for differences between memory systems is like looking for differences between running and walking. There certainly are many differences, but the main difference is that running requires more coordination among the different body parts and can be disrupted by small things (such as a corn on the toe) that may not interfere with walking at all. Are we to conclude, then, that running is located in the corn on your toe?”
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“Behind all seen things lies something vaster; everything is but a path, a portal or a window opening on something other than iteself. ”
― Wind, Sand and Stars
― Wind, Sand and Stars

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