*Please distribute to others who may be interested...*

You are hereby invited to the next weekly seminar in our interdisciplinary
series on Evolution, Complexity and
Cognition<http://ecco.vub.ac.be/?q=node/108>(ECCO).

*Time*:* Friday, December 9th* 14:00-16:00 p.m

*Place*: *Room B 0.036*
(building B, level 0, close to the human sciences computer rooms), on the
VUB Campus Etterbeek (Pleinlaan 2, 1050 Brussels),
in collaboration with MOSI. Coffee available. Free entrance: everybody
welcome!
*
*
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The origins of the origin: points and cycles as cognitive attractors for
ultimate explanations

*Clement Vidal  <http://clement.vidal.philosophons.com/>**(ECCO, VUB)*



*Abstract*:

All civilizations have developed myths explaining the origin of the world.
They provide answers the fundamental worldview question: “where does it all
come from?”. This childish question holds in fact four puzzling challenges,
whose nature are *epistemological*, *metaphysical*, *thermodynamical* and *
causal*. They can be summarized with the following questions: what are the
epistemological characteristics of an ultimate theory? why not nothing?
where does the energy of the universe comes from? what was the causal
origin of the universe?


Our approach to these questions is cognitive and philosophical. What is a
cognitively satisfying answer to the origin of the universe? What do we
cognitively expect to be a satisfying answer to the ultimate origin? What
are the limitations and biases of those explanations? We first outline four
major challenges that an ultimate explanation must face. We then show that
there are two cognitive attractors on which ultimate explanations tend to
fall, the *point* and the *cycle*. They are similar to the fixed point and
the limit-cycle in dynamical system theory. We analyze both the standard
Big Bang model and the creation by a God as point attractors. We raise
objections against cyclical cosmological models, such as the logical
viciousness of cycles, or the idea of an infinite eternal return. We
propose replies and remedies to these issues, and conclude that cycle-like
explanations are more promising than point-like explanations.

------------------------------

*Upcoming Seminars*

*
December 16*
The Complexity of Architecture
Philip Rutten <[email protected]>
*
**December 20 (Tuesday!)**
*Transformation of uncertainty in the therapeutic process.
 Jon Echanove <http://www.linkedin.com/in/jonechanove>
(AoEC<http://www.aoec.cn.com/>,
China) (ECCO)

*
*
More info about the ECCO seminar program: http://ecco.vub.ac.be/?q=node/108

-- 
David R. Weinbaum (Weaver)
ECCO Seminar Coordinator
http://clea.academia.edu/DavidWeinbaum

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