Gerald Edelman
Gerald
Edelman is the founder and director of The Neurosciences Institute,
a nonprofit research centre in San Diego that studies the biological
basis of higher brain function in humans, and is a professor
of neurobiology at The Scripps Research Institute. He won the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1972 for his work
on the immune system, most notably his discovery of the structure
of antibody molecules. He is noted for his theory of mind,
published in a trilogy of technical books, and in briefer form
for a more general audience in Bright
Air, Brilliant Fire: On the Matter of the Mind and
more recently in Wider
than the Sky: The Phenominal Gift of Consciousness. Topobiology contains
a theory of how the original neuronal network of a newborn's
brain is established during development of the embryo. Neural
Darwinism: The Theory of Neuronal Group Selection contains
a theory of memory that is built around the idea of plasticity
in the neural network in response to the environment. In The
Remembered Present: A Biological Theory of Consciousness, Edleman
argues that the mind and consciousness are wholly material
and purely biological phenomena, occurring as highly complex
cellular processes within the brain, and that the development
of consciousness and intelligence can be satisfactorily explained
by Darwinian theory. He proposes that we should attempt to
construct models of functioning brains which, through interactions
with their surroundings, can develop minds. In A
Universe of Consciousness: How Matter Becomes Imagination,
Edelman (with Giulio Tononi) propose what they call the dynamic
core hypothesis to explain the neural basis of conscious experience.
This hypothesis states that the activity of a group of neurons
can contribute directly to conscious experience if it is part
of a functional cluster, characterized by strong mutual interactions
among a set of neuronal groups over a period of hundreds of
milliseconds.
Edelman's
latest book is Second
Nature: Brain Science and Human Knowledge, a remarkable
contribution to the philosophy of the mind in which he breaks
new ground to an age-old problem by launching brain-based epistemology.
Original, lucid, concise, succinct: easily the
best in the field.

Related Links
• Gerald
Edelman's Nobel Prize page
• Gerald
Edelman's Scripps Research Institute page
• Gerald
Edelman's People's Archive Video
• Gerald
Edelman's PBS interview
• Gerald
Edelman's NPQ interview
• Gerald
Edelman's Berkeley Groks interview
• Gerald Edelman's Wikipedia page
 Gerald
Edelman Quotes
Consciousness: the remembered present.
We're inquiring into the deepest nature of our constitutions:
How we inherit from each other. How we can change. How our minds
think. How our will is related to our thoughts. How our thoughts
are related to our molecules. A knowledge of brain science will provide one
of the major foundations of the new age to come. That knowledge
will spawn cures for disease, new machines based on brain function,
further insights into our nature and how we know.
Science is the imagination in the service
of the verifiable truth.
Every perception is to some degree an act
of creation. Every active memory is to some degree an act of
imagination.
The hard problem doesn't require a solution,
it requires a cure.

|