Many Minds

Life, free energy, and the pursuit of goals

Apr 17, 2025
Kate Nave, a philosopher at the University of Edinburgh and author of *A Drive to Survive*, discusses the free energy principle and its evolution since its introduction. She explores its significant influence on cognitive science and its connection to concepts like cybernetics and predictive processing. The conversation highlights the relationship between life and cognition, questioning traditional views of intentionality and representation. Kate also critiques the principle, emphasizing the need to distinguish between various life processes.
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INSIGHT

Distinguishing Living from Non-living

  • Life and non-life differ primarily in purposiveness: living systems are goal-directed and self-producing.
  • Cyberneticists initially denied purposiveness and treated life as feedback control like any physical system, but this view was later challenged.
INSIGHT

Mind-Life Continuity and Normativity

  • Cognition is fundamentally normative, involving goals and success/failure, grounded in biological needs rather than abstract reasoning.
  • The free energy principle provides a shared language linking basic control with cognitive processes but may miss aspects essential to biological intentionality.
INSIGHT

Prediction's Role in Cognition

  • Prediction in cognition ranges from trivial statistical correlations to strongly intentional forecasting.
  • The FEP shows that rich psychological interpretations of prediction don't apply to all systems; additional theory is needed to justify intentional prediction.
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