The Riddle of a Human Being: A Human Singularity of Co-evolutionary Processes

Authors

  • Helena N. Knyazeva Institute of Philosophy of the Russian of Sciences

Keywords:

Co-evolution, Human being, Nonlinearity, Self-organization, Tempo-worlds

Abstract

The theory of self-organization of complex systems studies laws of sustainable co-evolutionary development of structures having different speeds of development as well as laws of assembling of a complex evolutionary whole from parts when some elements of ldquo;memoryrdquo; (the biological memory, i.e. DNA, the memory of culture, i.e. the cultural and historical traditions, etc.) must be included. The theory reveals general rules of nonlinear synthesis of complex evolutionary structures. The most important and paradoxical consequences of the holistic view, including an approach to solving the riddle of human personality, are as follows: 1) the explanation why and under what conditions a part (a human) can be more complex than a whole (society); 2) in order to reconstruct society it is necessary to change an individual but not by cutting off the supposed undesirable past, since a human being as a microcosm is the synthesis of all previous stages of evolution, and as a result of repression of, it would seem, the wild past one can extinguish a ldquo;divine sparkrdquo; in his soul; 3) in the physical sense, singularity denotes a moment of instability, phase transition; one can talk about the human singularity of co-evolutionary processes, since in such a moment of instability individual actions of a human can play a key role in determining a channel of further development as well as in appearance of a new pattern of collective behavior in society; 4) as the models of nonlinear dynamics, elaborated at the Keldysh Institute of Applied Mathematics of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow, show, there is a possibility of a direct influence of the future and even a touch of an infinitely remote future in certain evolutionary regimes and under rigorously definite conditions, more over, it turns out that such a possibility exists only for a human (admittedly, through a specific state of being inherent to him ndash; the sleep without dreams) but not for the human society.

Author Biography

Helena N. Knyazeva, Institute of Philosophy of the Russian of Sciences

Department of Evolutionary EpistemologyLeading Research Associate

Downloads

Published

11-10-2008

How to Cite

Knyazeva, H. N. (2008). The Riddle of a Human Being: A Human Singularity of Co-evolutionary Processes. Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, 4(1-2), 244–259. Retrieved from http://cosmosandhistory.org/index.php/journal/article/view/106