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Mind in Life
Thompson's 2007 Harvard University Press landmark — the fullest statement of the life-mind continuity thesis and the philosophical foundation of the enactive approach to consciousness.
Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind, published by Harvard University Press in 2007, is Thompson's most systematic work. Written largely after Varela's death in 2001, the book develops the life-mind continuity thesis in full philosophical and empirical detail, integrating autopoiesis theory with the phenomenology of Husserl and Merleau-Ponty and with contemporary cognitive neuroscience. Its central argument is that mind is continuous with life — that the capacities we identify as mental are elaborations of the sense-making present in every autopoietic system — and that this continuity has consequences for how we understand cognition, consciousness, and the relationship between biological and artificial systems.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book's reception established Thompson as the principal philosophical voice of the enactive tradition after Varela's death. Its arguments have shaped debates in philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and biology for the past two decades, and its relevance to the AI debate has intensified with the rise of systems that produce impressive outputs without any of the
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