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Autopoiesis

The term autopoiesis (from Greek αὐτo- (auto-) 'self', and ποίησις (poiesis) 'creation, production') refers to a system capable of producing and maintaining itself by creating its own parts.[1] The term was introduced in the 1972 publication Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living by Chilean biologists Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela to define the self-maintaining chemistry of living cells.[2]

3D representation of a living cell during the process of mitosis, example of an autopoietic system

The concept has since been applied to the fields of cognition, neurobiology, systems theory, architecture and sociology. Niklas Luhmann briefly introduced the concept of autopoiesis to organizational theory.[3]

Overview edit

In their 1972 book Autopoiesis and Cognition, Chilean biologists Maturana and Varela described how they invented the word autopoiesis.[4]: 89 : 16 

"It was in these circumstances ... in which he analyzed Don Quixote's dilemma of whether to follow the path of arms (praxis, action) or the path of letters (poiesis, creation, production), I understood for the first time the power of the word "poiesis" and invented the word that we needed: autopoiesis. This was a word without a history, a word that could directly mean what takes place in the dynamics of the autonomy proper to living systems."

They explained that,[4]: 78 

"An autopoietic machine is a machine organized (defined as a unity) as a network of processes of production (transformation and destruction) of components which: (i) through their interactions and transformations continuously regenerate and realize the network of processes (relations) that produced them; and (ii) constitute it (the machine) as a concrete unity in space in which they (the components) exist by specifying the topological domain of its realization as such a network."

They described the "space defined by an autopoietic system" as "self-contained", a space that "cannot be described by using dimensions that define another space. When we refer to our interactions with a concrete autopoietic system, however, we project this system on the space of our manipulations and make a description of this projection."[4]: 89 

Meaning edit

Autopoiesis was originally presented as a system description that was said to define and explain the nature of living systems. A canonical example of an autopoietic system is the biological cell. The eukaryotic cell, for example, is made of various biochemical components such as nucleic acids and proteins, and is organized into bounded structures such as the cell nucleus, various organelles, a cell membrane and cytoskeleton. These structures, based on an internal flow of molecules and energy, produce the components which, in turn, continue to maintain the organized bounded structure that gives rise to these components.

An autopoietic system is to be contrasted with an allopoietic system, such as a car factory, which uses raw materials (components) to generate a car (an organized structure) which is something other than itself (the factory). However, if the system is extended from the factory to include components in the factory's "environment", such as supply chains, plant / equipment, workers, dealerships, customers, contracts, competitors, cars, spare parts, and so on, then as a total viable system it could be considered to be autopoietic.[5]

Of course, cells also require raw materials (nutrients), and produce numerous products -waste products, the extracellular matrix, intracellular messaging molecules, etc.

Autopoiesis in biological systems can be viewed as a network of constraints that work to maintain themselves. This concept has been called organizational closure[6] or constraint closure[7] and is closely related to the study of autocatalytic chemical networks where constraints are reactions required to sustain life.

Though others have often used the term as a synonym for self-organization, Maturana himself stated he would "[n]ever use the notion of self-organization ... Operationally it is impossible. That is, if the organization of a thing changes, the thing changes".[8] Moreover, an autopoietic system is autonomous and operationally closed, in the sense that there are sufficient processes within it to maintain the whole. Autopoietic systems are "structurally coupled" with their medium, embedded in a dynamic of changes that can be recalled as sensory-motor coupling.[9] This continuous dynamic is considered as a rudimentary form of knowledge or cognition and can be observed throughout life-forms.

An application of the concept of autopoiesis to sociology can be found in Niklas Luhmann's Systems Theory, which was subsequently adapted by Bob Jessop in his studies of the capitalist state system. Marjatta Maula adapted the concept of autopoiesis in a business context.[10] The theory of autopoiesis has also been applied in the context of legal systems by not only Niklas Luhmann, but also Gunther Teubner.[11][12] Patrik Schumacher has applied the term to refer to the 'discursive self-referential making of architecture.' [13][14] Varela eventually further applied autopoesis to develop models of mind, brain, and behavior called non-representationalist, enactive, embodied cognitive neuroscience , culminating in neurophenomenology.

In the context of textual studies, Jerome McGann argues that texts are "autopoietic mechanisms operating as self-generating feedback systems that cannot be separated from those who manipulate and use them".[15] Citing Maturana and Varela, he defines an autopoietic system as "a closed topological space that 'continuously generates and specifies its own organization through its operation as a system of production of its own components, and does this in an endless turnover of components'", concluding that "Autopoietic systems are thus distinguished from allopoietic systems, which are Cartesian and which 'have as the product of their functioning something different from themselves'". Coding and markup appear allopoietic", McGann argues, but are generative parts of the system they serve to maintain, and thus language and print or electronic technology are autopoietic systems.[16]: 200–1 

The philosopher Slavoj Žižek, in his discussion of Hegel, argues:

"Hegel is – to use today's terms – the ultimate thinker of autopoiesis, of the process of the emergence of necessary features out of chaotic contingency, the thinker of contingency's gradual self-organisation, of the gradual rise of order out of chaos."[17]

Relation to complexity edit

Autopoiesis can be defined as the ratio between the complexity of a system and the complexity of its environment.[18]

This generalized view of autopoiesis considers systems as self-producing not in terms of their physical components, but in terms of its organization, which can be measured in terms of information and complexity. In other words, we can describe autopoietic systems as those producing more of their own complexity than the one produced by their environment.

— Carlos Gershenson, "Requisite Variety, Autopoiesis, and Self-organization" [19]

Autopoiesis has been proposed as a potential mechanism of abiogenesis, by which molecules evolved into more complex cells that could support the development of life.[20]

Comparison with other theories of life edit

Autopoiesis is just one of several current theories of life, including the chemoton[21] of Tibor Gánti, the hypercycle of Manfred Eigen and Peter Schuster,[22] [23] [24] the (M,R) systems[25][26] of Robert Rosen, and the autocatalytic sets[27] of Stuart Kauffman, similar to an earlier proposal by Freeman Dyson.[28] All of these (including autopoiesis) found their original inspiration in Erwin Schrödinger's book What is Life?[29] but at first they appear to have little in common with one another, largely because the authors did not communicate with one another, and none of them made any reference in their principal publications to any of the other theories. Nonetheless, there are more similarities than may be obvious at first sight, for example between Gánti and Rosen.[30] Until recently[31][32][33] there have been almost no attempts to compare the different theories and discuss them together.

Relation to cognition edit

An extensive discussion of the connection of autopoiesis to cognition is provided by Evan Thompson in his 2007 publication, Mind in Life.[34] The basic notion of autopoiesis as involving constructive interaction with the environment is extended to include cognition. Initially, Maturana defined cognition as behavior of an organism "with relevance to the maintenance of itself".[35]: 13  However, computer models that are self-maintaining but non-cognitive have been devised, so some additional restrictions are needed, and the suggestion is that the maintenance process, to be cognitive, involves readjustment of the internal workings of the system in some metabolic process. On this basis it is claimed that autopoiesis is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for cognition.[36] Thompson wrote that this distinction may or may not be fruitful, but what matters is that living systems involve autopoiesis and (if it is necessary to add this point) cognition as well.[37]: 127  It can be noted that this definition of 'cognition' is restricted, and does not necessarily entail any awareness or consciousness by the living system. With the publication of The Embodied Mind in 1991, Varela, Thompson and Rosch applied autopoesis to make non-representationalist, and enactive models of mind, brain and behavior, which further developed embodied cognitive neuroscience, later culminating in neurophenomenology.

Relation to consciousness edit

The connection of autopoiesis to cognition, or if necessary, of living systems to cognition, is an objective assessment ascertainable by observation of a living system.

One question that arises is about the connection between cognition seen in this manner and consciousness. The separation of cognition and consciousness recognizes that the organism may be unaware of the substratum where decisions are made. What is the connection between these realms? Thompson refers to this issue as the "explanatory gap", and one aspect of it is the hard problem of consciousness, how and why we have qualia.[38]

A second question is whether autopoiesis can provide a bridge between these concepts. Thompson discusses this issue from the standpoint of enactivism. An autopoietic cell actively relates to its environment. Its sensory responses trigger motor behavior governed by autopoiesis, and this behavior (it is claimed) is a simplified version of a nervous system behavior. The further claim is that real-time interactions like this require attention, and an implication of attention is awareness.[39]

Criticism edit

There are multiple criticisms of the use of the term in both its original context, as an attempt to define and explain the living, and its various expanded usages, such as applying it to self-organizing systems in general or social systems in particular.[40] Critics have argued that the concept and its theory fail to define or explain living systems and that, because of the extreme language of self-referentiality it uses without any external reference, it is really an attempt to give substantiation to Maturana's radical constructivist or solipsistic epistemology,[41] or what Danilo Zolo[42][43] has called instead a "desolate theology". An example is the assertion by Maturana and Varela that "We do not see what we do not see and what we do not see does not exist".[44]

According to Razeto-Barry, the influence of Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living in mainstream biology has proven to be limited. Razeto-Barry believes that autopoiesis is not commonly used as the criterion for life.[45]

Zoologist and philosopher Donna Haraway also criticizes the usage of the term, arguing that "nothing makes itself; nothing is really autopoietic or self-organizing",[46] and suggests the use of sympoiesis, meaning "making-with", instead.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "autopoiesis". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  2. ^ Maturana, Humberto R.; Varela, Francisco J. (1972). Autopoiesis and cognition: the realization of the living. Boston studies in the philosophy and history of science (1 ed.). Dordrecht: Reidel. p. 141. OCLC 989554341.
  3. ^ Achterberg, Jan; Vriens, Dirk (2010). "The Social "arche," Organizations as Social Systems: Luhmann". Organizations. Springer Berlin. pp. 118–120. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-14316-8_4. ISBN 978-3-642-14315-1.
  4. ^ a b c Maturana, Humberto; Varela, Francisco (1980) [1972]. Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living (2 ed.). Springer. ISBN 9789027710161.
  5. ^ Koskinen KU (2013). Knowledge production in organizations : a processual autopoietic view. Heidelberg: Springer. ISBN 9783319001043. OCLC 846465493.
  6. ^ Montévil, Maël (2015). "Biological organisation as closure of constraints". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 372: 179–191. Bibcode:2015JThBi.372..179M. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2015.02.029. PMID 25752259. S2CID 4654439. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  7. ^ Kauffman, Stuart A. (April 1, 2019). A world beyond physics: the emergence and evolution of life. Oxford University Press.
  8. ^ Maturana H (1987). "Everything is said by an observer". In Thompson, William Irwin (ed.). Gaia, a Way of Knowing: Political Implications of the New Biology. Great Barrington, MA: Lindisfarne Press. pp. 65–82, 71. ISBN 978-0-940262-23-2. OCLC 15792540.
  9. ^ Allen M, Friston KJ (2018-06-01). "From cognitivism to autopoiesis: towards a computational framework for the embodied mind". Synthese. 195 (6): 2459–2482. doi:10.1007/s11229-016-1288-5. PMC 5972168. PMID 29887647.
  10. ^ Maula M (2006). Organizations as learning systems: 'Living composition' as an enabling infrastructure. Advanced Series in Management. Emerald Group Publishing.
  11. ^ Teubner G (1992). Law as an Autopoietic System. The European University Institute Press.
  12. ^ For a discussion on the evolution and development of autopoietic legal systems, see, Kaye, Tim, ed. (2011). Law, justice, and miscommunications: essays in applied legal philosophy. Lake Mary, Fla: Vandeplas Publ. ISBN 978-1-60042-152-5.
  13. ^ "Architect Patrik Schumacher: 'I've been depicted as a fascist'". the Guardian. 2018-01-17. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  14. ^ "Postmodernisms: Theories and Analyses of Architecture II | "The Autopoiesis of Architecture" Patrik Schumacher's Parametricism and Theory". blogs.cornell.edu. Retrieved 2021-12-07.
  15. ^ McGann J (1986). The Textual Condition. Princeton University Press. p. 15.
  16. ^ McGann J (2000). "Marking Texts of Many Dimensions". In Schreibman S, Siemens RG, Unsworth JM (eds.). A Companion to Digital Humanities. John Wiley & Sons.
  17. ^ Žižek S (2012). Less Than Nothing. Verso. p. 467.
  18. ^ Fernandez N, Maldonado C, Gershenson C (2013). "Chapter 2: Information Measures of Complexity, Emergence, Self-organization, Homeostasis, and Autopoiesis". Guided self-organization: Inception. Springer. pp. 19–51. arXiv:1304.1842. Bibcode:2013arXiv1304.1842F. ISBN 978-3-642-53734-9.
  19. ^ Gershenson C (26 Sep 2014). "Requisite Variety, Autopoiesis, and Self-organization". arXiv:1409.7475 [nlin.AO].
  20. ^ Highfield, Roger; Coveney, Peter (1995). Frontiers of complexity: the search for order in a chaotic world. London: Faber. p. 210. ISBN 0-571-17922-3.
  21. ^ Gánti, Tibor (2003). Eörs Száthmary; James Griesemer (eds.). The Principles of Life. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198507260.
  22. ^ Eigen, M; Schuster, P (1977). "The hypercycle: a principle of natural self-organization. A: emergence of the hypercycle". Naturwissenschaften. 64 (11): 541–565. doi:10.1007/bf00450633. PMID 593400. S2CID 42131267.
  23. ^ Eigen, M; Schuster, P. "The hypercycle: a principle of natural self-organization. B: the abstract hypercycle". Naturwissenschaften. 65 (1): 7–41. doi:10.1007/bf00420631. S2CID 1812273.
  24. ^ Eigen, M; Schuster, P. "The hypercycle: a principle of natural self-organization. C: the realistic hypercycle". Naturwissenschaften. 65 (7): 41–369. doi:10.1007/bf00420631. S2CID 1812273.
  25. ^ Rosen, R. (1958). "The representation of biological systems from the standpoint of the theory of categories". Bull. Math. Biophys. 20 (4): 317–341. doi:10.1007/BF02477890.
  26. ^ Rosen, R. (1991). Life Itself: a comprehensive inquiry into the nature, origin, and fabrication of life. New York: Columbia University Press.
  27. ^ Kauffman, S. A. (1969). "Metabolic stability and epigenesis in randomly constructed genetic nets". J. Theor. Biol. 22 (3): 437–467. Bibcode:1969JThBi..22..437K. doi:10.1016/0022-5193(69)90015-0. PMID 5803332.
  28. ^ Dyson, F. J. (1982). "A model for the origin of life". J. Mol. Evol. 18 (5): 344–350. Bibcode:1982JMolE..18..344D. doi:10.1007/bf01733901. PMID 7120429. S2CID 30423925.
  29. ^ Schrödinger, Erwin (1944). What is Life?. Cambridge University Press.
  30. ^ Cornish-Bowden, A. (2015). "Tibor Gánti and Robert Rosen: contrasting approaches to the same problem". J. Theor. Biol. 381: 6–10. Bibcode:2015JThBi.381....6C. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2015.05.015. PMID 25988381.
  31. ^ Letelier, J C; Cárdenas, M L; Cornish-Bowden, A (2011). "From L'Homme Machine to metabolic closure: steps towards understanding life". J. Theor. Biol. 286 (1): 100–113. Bibcode:2011JThBi.286..100L. doi:10.1016/j.jtbi.2011.06.033. PMID 21763318.
  32. ^ Igamberdiev, A.U. (2014). "Time rescaling and pattern formation in biological evolution". BioSystems. 123: 19–26. doi:10.1016/j.biosystems.2014.03.002. PMID 24690545.
  33. ^ Cornish-Bowden, A; Cárdenas, M L (2020). "Contrasting theories of life: historical context, current theories. In search of an ideal theory". BioSystems. 188: 104063. doi:10.1016/j.biosystems.2019.104063. PMID 31715221. S2CID 207946798.
  34. ^ Thompson, Evan (2007). "Chapter 5: Autopoiesis: The organization of the living". Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind. Harvard University Press. pp. 91–127. ISBN 978-0-674-02511-0.
  35. ^ Maturana, Humberto; Varela, Francisco (1980) [1972]. "The cognitive process". Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living (2 ed.). Springer. ISBN 9789027710161.
  36. ^ Bitbol M, Luisi PL (November 2004). "Autopoiesis with or without cognition: defining life at its edge". Journal of the Royal Society, Interface. 1 (1): 99–107. doi:10.1098/rsif.2004.0012. PMC 1618936. PMID 16849156.
  37. ^ Thompson, Evan (2007). Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02511-0.
  38. ^ Thompson, Evan (2007). "Cognitivism". Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind. Harvard University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-674-02511-0.
  39. ^ Thompson, Evan (2007). "Sensorimotor subjectivity". Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind. Harvard University Press. p. 243. ISBN 978-0-674-02511-0.
  40. ^ Fleischaker G (1992). "Autopoiesis in Systems Analysis: A Debate". International Journal of General Systems. 21 (2): 131–271. doi:10.1080/03081079208945065.
  41. ^ Swenson R (1992). "Autocatakinetics, Yes—Autopoiesis, No: Steps Toward a Unified Theory of Evolutionary Ordering". International Journal of General Systems. 21 (2): 207–208. doi:10.1080/03081079208945072.
  42. ^ Kenny V, Gardner G (1988). "The constructions of self-organizing systems". The Irish Journal of Psychology. 9 (1): 1–24. doi:10.1080/03033910.1988.10557704.
  43. ^ Wolfe C (1998). Critical environments: postmodern theory and the pragmatics of the "outside". University of Minnesota Press. pp. 62–3. ISBN 978-0-8166-3019-6.
  44. ^ Maturana H, Varela F (1988). The Tree of Knowledge. New Science Library. Boston: Shambhala Publications. p. 242.
  45. ^ Razeto-Barry, Pablo (October 2012). "Autopoiesis 40 Years Later. A Review and A Reformulation". Origins of Life. 42 (6): 543–567. Bibcode:2012OLEB...42..543R. doi:10.1007/s11084-012-9297-y. PMID 23054553. S2CID 8267553 – via Research Gate.
  46. ^ Haraway, Donna Jeanne (2016). Staying with the trouble : making kin in the Chthulucene. Internet Archive. Durham : Duke University Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8223-6214-2.

Further reading edit

  • Capra F (1997). The Web of Life. Random House. ISBN 978-0-385-47676-8. – general introduction to the ideas behind autopoiesis
  • Goosseff KA (2010). "Autopoeisis and meaning: a biological approach to Bakhtin's superaddressee". Journal of Organizational Change Management. 23 (2): 145–151. doi:10.1108/09534811011031319.
  • Dyke C (1988). The Evolutionary Dynamics of Complex Systems: A Study in Biosocial Complexity. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Livingston I (2006). Between Science and Literature: An Introduction to Autopoetics. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-07254-3. —an adaptation of autopoiesis to language.
  • Luhmann, Niklas (1990). Essays on Self-Reference. Columbia University Press. —Luhmann's adaptation of autopoiesis to social systems
  • Luisi PL (February 2003). "Autopoiesis: a review and a reappraisal". Die Naturwissenschaften. 90 (2): 49–59. Bibcode:2003NW.....90...49L. doi:10.1007/s00114-002-0389-9. PMID 12590297. S2CID 10611332. —biologist view of autopoiesis
  • Maturana, Humberto R.; Varela, Francisco J. (1972). Autopoiesis and cognition: the realization of the living. Boston studies in the philosophy and history of science. Dordrecht: Reidel. p. 141. OCLC 989554341.
  • Varela, Francisco G.; Maturana, Humberto R.; Uribe, R. (1974-05-01). "Autopoiesis: The organization of living systems, its characterization and a model". Biosystems. 5 (4): 187–196. doi:10.1016/0303-2647(74)90031-8. ISSN 0303-2647. PMID 4407425. Retrieved 2020-11-13.
  • Maturana, Humberto; Varela, Francisco (1980). Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization of the Living (2nd ed.). Springer. ISBN 9789027710161.
  • Cohen RS, Wartofsky MW, eds. (30 April 1980). Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science. Vol. 42. Dordecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co. ISBN 978-90-277-1015-4. —the main published reference on autopoiesis
  • Mingers J (1994). Self-Producing Systems. Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. ISBN 978-0-306-44797-6. —a book on the autopoiesis concept in many different areas
  • Robb FF (1991). "Accounting – A Virtual Autopoietic System?". Systems Practice. 4 (3): 215–235. doi:10.1007/BF01059566. S2CID 145281360.
  • Tabbi J (2002). Cognitive Fictions. Vol. 2002. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-0-8166-3557-3. — draws on systems theory and cognitive science to introduce autopoiesis to literary studies
  • Varela FJ, Maturana HR, Uribe R (1974). "Autopoiesis: the organization of living systems, its characterization and a model". Biosystems. 5 (4): 187–196. doi:10.1016/0303-2647(74)90031-8. PMID 4407425. —one of the original papers on the concept of autopoiesis.
  • Bourgine P, Stewart J (2004). "Autopoiesis and cognition". Artificial Life. 10 (3): 327–45. doi:10.1162/1064546041255557. PMID 15245631. S2CID 11475918.
  • Winograd T, Flores F (1990). Understanding Computers and Cognition: A New Foundation for Design. Ablex Pub. Corp. ISBN 9780893910501. —cognitive systems perspective on autopoiesis

External links edit

  • The Observer Web: Autopoiesis and Enaction: a website with more explanations
  • Several papers on autopoietic theory are available through archonic.net
  • A mindmap-collection of links and papers visualized by Ragnar Heil 2018-04-29 at the Wayback Machine
  • Autopoiesis and knowledge in the organization by Aquiles Limone, Luis E. Bastias

autopoiesis, term, autopoiesis, from, greek, αὐτo, auto, self, ποίησις, poiesis, creation, production, refers, system, capable, producing, maintaining, itself, creating, parts, term, introduced, 1972, publication, cognition, realization, living, chilean, biolo. The term autopoiesis from Greek aὐto auto self and poihsis poiesis creation production refers to a system capable of producing and maintaining itself by creating its own parts 1 The term was introduced in the 1972 publication Autopoiesis and Cognition The Realization of the Living by Chilean biologists Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela to define the self maintaining chemistry of living cells 2 3D representation of a living cell during the process of mitosis example of an autopoietic system The concept has since been applied to the fields of cognition neurobiology systems theory architecture and sociology Niklas Luhmann briefly introduced the concept of autopoiesis to organizational theory 3 Contents 1 Overview 2 Meaning 3 Relation to complexity 3 1 Comparison with other theories of life 4 Relation to cognition 5 Relation to consciousness 6 Criticism 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksOverview editIn their 1972 book Autopoiesis and Cognition Chilean biologists Maturana and Varela described how they invented the word autopoiesis 4 89 16 It was in these circumstances in which he analyzed Don Quixote s dilemma of whether to follow the path of arms praxis action or the path of letters poiesis creation production I understood for the first time the power of the word poiesis and invented the word that we needed autopoiesis This was a word without a history a word that could directly mean what takes place in the dynamics of the autonomy proper to living systems They explained that 4 78 An autopoietic machine is a machine organized defined as a unity as a network of processes of production transformation and destruction of components which i through their interactions and transformations continuously regenerate and realize the network of processes relations that produced them and ii constitute it the machine as a concrete unity in space in which they the components exist by specifying the topological domain of its realization as such a network They described the space defined by an autopoietic system as self contained a space that cannot be described by using dimensions that define another space When we refer to our interactions with a concrete autopoietic system however we project this system on the space of our manipulations and make a description of this projection 4 89 Meaning editAutopoiesis was originally presented as a system description that was said to define and explain the nature of living systems A canonical example of an autopoietic system is the biological cell The eukaryotic cell for example is made of various biochemical components such as nucleic acids and proteins and is organized into bounded structures such as the cell nucleus various organelles a cell membrane and cytoskeleton These structures based on an internal flow of molecules and energy produce the components which in turn continue to maintain the organized bounded structure that gives rise to these components An autopoietic system is to be contrasted with an allopoietic system such as a car factory which uses raw materials components to generate a car an organized structure which is something other than itself the factory However if the system is extended from the factory to include components in the factory s environment such as supply chains plant equipment workers dealerships customers contracts competitors cars spare parts and so on then as a total viable system it could be considered to be autopoietic 5 Of course cells also require raw materials nutrients and produce numerous products waste products the extracellular matrix intracellular messaging molecules etc Autopoiesis in biological systems can be viewed as a network of constraints that work to maintain themselves This concept has been called organizational closure 6 or constraint closure 7 and is closely related to the study of autocatalytic chemical networks where constraints are reactions required to sustain life Though others have often used the term as a synonym for self organization Maturana himself stated he would n ever use the notion of self organization Operationally it is impossible That is if the organization of a thing changes the thing changes 8 Moreover an autopoietic system is autonomous and operationally closed in the sense that there are sufficient processes within it to maintain the whole Autopoietic systems are structurally coupled with their medium embedded in a dynamic of changes that can be recalled as sensory motor coupling 9 This continuous dynamic is considered as a rudimentary form of knowledge or cognition and can be observed throughout life forms An application of the concept of autopoiesis to sociology can be found in Niklas Luhmann s Systems Theory which was subsequently adapted by Bob Jessop in his studies of the capitalist state system Marjatta Maula adapted the concept of autopoiesis in a business context 10 The theory of autopoiesis has also been applied in the context of legal systems by not only Niklas Luhmann but also Gunther Teubner 11 12 Patrik Schumacher has applied the term to refer to the discursive self referential making of architecture 13 14 Varela eventually further applied autopoesis to develop models of mind brain and behavior called non representationalist enactive embodied cognitive neuroscience culminating in neurophenomenology In the context of textual studies Jerome McGann argues that texts are autopoietic mechanisms operating as self generating feedback systems that cannot be separated from those who manipulate and use them 15 Citing Maturana and Varela he defines an autopoietic system as a closed topological space that continuously generates and specifies its own organization through its operation as a system of production of its own components and does this in an endless turnover of components concluding that Autopoietic systems are thus distinguished from allopoietic systems which are Cartesian and which have as the product of their functioning something different from themselves Coding and markup appear allopoietic McGann argues but are generative parts of the system they serve to maintain and thus language and print or electronic technology are autopoietic systems 16 200 1 The philosopher Slavoj Zizek in his discussion of Hegel argues Hegel is to use today s terms the ultimate thinker of autopoiesis of the process of the emergence of necessary features out of chaotic contingency the thinker of contingency s gradual self organisation of the gradual rise of order out of chaos 17 Relation to complexity editAutopoiesis can be defined as the ratio between the complexity of a system and the complexity of its environment 18 This generalized view of autopoiesis considers systems as self producing not in terms of their physical components but in terms of its organization which can be measured in terms of information and complexity In other words we can describe autopoietic systems as those producing more of their own complexity than the one produced by their environment Carlos Gershenson Requisite Variety Autopoiesis and Self organization 19 Autopoiesis has been proposed as a potential mechanism of abiogenesis by which molecules evolved into more complex cells that could support the development of life 20 Comparison with other theories of life edit Autopoiesis is just one of several current theories of life including the chemoton 21 of Tibor Ganti the hypercycle of Manfred Eigen and Peter Schuster 22 23 24 the M R systems 25 26 of Robert Rosen and the autocatalytic sets 27 of Stuart Kauffman similar to an earlier proposal by Freeman Dyson 28 All of these including autopoiesis found their original inspiration in Erwin Schrodinger s book What is Life 29 but at first they appear to have little in common with one another largely because the authors did not communicate with one another and none of them made any reference in their principal publications to any of the other theories Nonetheless there are more similarities than may be obvious at first sight for example between Ganti and Rosen 30 Until recently 31 32 33 there have been almost no attempts to compare the different theories and discuss them together Relation to cognition editAn extensive discussion of the connection of autopoiesis to cognition is provided by Evan Thompson in his 2007 publication Mind in Life 34 The basic notion of autopoiesis as involving constructive interaction with the environment is extended to include cognition Initially Maturana defined cognition as behavior of an organism with relevance to the maintenance of itself 35 13 However computer models that are self maintaining but non cognitive have been devised so some additional restrictions are needed and the suggestion is that the maintenance process to be cognitive involves readjustment of the internal workings of the system in some metabolic process On this basis it is claimed that autopoiesis is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for cognition 36 Thompson wrote that this distinction may or may not be fruitful but what matters is that living systems involve autopoiesis and if it is necessary to add this point cognition as well 37 127 It can be noted that this definition of cognition is restricted and does not necessarily entail any awareness or consciousness by the living system With the publication of The Embodied Mind in 1991 Varela Thompson and Rosch applied autopoesis to make non representationalist and enactive models of mind brain and behavior which further developed embodied cognitive neuroscience later culminating in neurophenomenology Relation to consciousness editThe connection of autopoiesis to cognition or if necessary of living systems to cognition is an objective assessment ascertainable by observation of a living system One question that arises is about the connection between cognition seen in this manner and consciousness The separation of cognition and consciousness recognizes that the organism may be unaware of the substratum where decisions are made What is the connection between these realms Thompson refers to this issue as the explanatory gap and one aspect of it is the hard problem of consciousness how and why we have qualia 38 A second question is whether autopoiesis can provide a bridge between these concepts Thompson discusses this issue from the standpoint of enactivism An autopoietic cell actively relates to its environment Its sensory responses trigger motor behavior governed by autopoiesis and this behavior it is claimed is a simplified version of a nervous system behavior The further claim is that real time interactions like this require attention and an implication of attention is awareness 39 Criticism editThere are multiple criticisms of the use of the term in both its original context as an attempt to define and explain the living and its various expanded usages such as applying it to self organizing systems in general or social systems in particular 40 Critics have argued that the concept and its theory fail to define or explain living systems and that because of the extreme language of self referentiality it uses without any external reference it is really an attempt to give substantiation to Maturana s radical constructivist or solipsistic epistemology 41 or what Danilo Zolo 42 43 has called instead a desolate theology An example is the assertion by Maturana and Varela that We do not see what we do not see and what we do not see does not exist 44 According to Razeto Barry the influence of Autopoiesis and Cognition The Realization of the Living in mainstream biology has proven to be limited Razeto Barry believes that autopoiesis is not commonly used as the criterion for life 45 Zoologist and philosopher Donna Haraway also criticizes the usage of the term arguing that nothing makes itself nothing is really autopoietic or self organizing 46 and suggests the use of sympoiesis meaning making with instead See also editAbiogenesis Adaptive system System that can adapt to the environment Allopoiesis Autocatalytic set Autonomous agency theory viable system theoryPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Biosemiotics Biology interpreted as a sign system Dissipative system Thermodynamically open system which is not in equilibrium Chemoton Dynamical system Mathematical model of the time dependence of a point in space Enactivism Philosophical concept Free energy principle Hypothesis in neuroscience Hypercycle chemistry Information metabolism Psychological theory of interaction between biological organisms and their environment Loschmidt s paradox Conflict between known physical principles time symmetry and entropy Niklas Luhmann German sociologist 1927 1998 Neuropheneomenology Varela et al s s application of autopoesis to embodied enactive non representationalist cognitive neuroscience Non equilibrium thermodynamics Branch of thermodynamics Poietic Generator Social network game played on a two dimensional matrix Polytely Problem solving technique Practopoiesis System that can adapt to the environmentPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Quine computing Self replicating program Relational order theories Sociological theoryPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Robert Rosen American theoretical biologistPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Self replication Type of behavior of a dynamical system Self replicating machine Device able to make copies of itself Viable system theory concerns cybernetic processes in relation to the development evolution of dynamical systemsPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallbackReferences edit autopoiesis Oxford Reference Retrieved 2021 11 12 Maturana Humberto R Varela Francisco J 1972 Autopoiesis and cognition the realization of the living Boston studies in the philosophy and history of science 1 ed Dordrecht Reidel p 141 OCLC 989554341 Achterberg Jan Vriens Dirk 2010 The Social arche Organizations as Social Systems Luhmann Organizations Springer Berlin pp 118 120 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 14316 8 4 ISBN 978 3 642 14315 1 a b c Maturana Humberto Varela Francisco 1980 1972 Autopoiesis and Cognition The Realization of the Living 2 ed Springer ISBN 9789027710161 Koskinen KU 2013 Knowledge production in organizations a processual autopoietic view Heidelberg Springer ISBN 9783319001043 OCLC 846465493 Montevil Mael 2015 Biological organisation as closure of constraints Journal of Theoretical Biology 372 179 191 Bibcode 2015JThBi 372 179M doi 10 1016 j jtbi 2015 02 029 PMID 25752259 S2CID 4654439 Retrieved 6 July 2021 Kauffman Stuart A April 1 2019 A world beyond physics the emergence and evolution of life Oxford University Press Maturana H 1987 Everything is said by an observer In Thompson William Irwin ed Gaia a Way of Knowing Political Implications of the New Biology Great Barrington MA Lindisfarne Press pp 65 82 71 ISBN 978 0 940262 23 2 OCLC 15792540 Allen M Friston KJ 2018 06 01 From cognitivism to autopoiesis towards a computational framework for the embodied mind Synthese 195 6 2459 2482 doi 10 1007 s11229 016 1288 5 PMC 5972168 PMID 29887647 Maula M 2006 Organizations as learning systems Living composition as an enabling infrastructure Advanced Series in Management Emerald Group Publishing Teubner G 1992 Law as an Autopoietic System The European University Institute Press For a discussion on the evolution and development of autopoietic legal systems see Kaye Tim ed 2011 Law justice and miscommunications essays in applied legal philosophy Lake Mary Fla Vandeplas Publ ISBN 978 1 60042 152 5 Architect Patrik Schumacher I ve been depicted as a fascist the Guardian 2018 01 17 Retrieved 2021 12 07 Postmodernisms Theories and Analyses of Architecture II The Autopoiesis of Architecture Patrik Schumacher s Parametricism and Theory blogs cornell edu Retrieved 2021 12 07 McGann J 1986 The Textual Condition Princeton University Press p 15 McGann J 2000 Marking Texts of Many Dimensions In Schreibman S Siemens RG Unsworth JM eds A Companion to Digital Humanities John Wiley amp Sons Zizek S 2012 Less Than Nothing Verso p 467 Fernandez N Maldonado C Gershenson C 2013 Chapter 2 Information Measures of Complexity Emergence Self organization Homeostasis and Autopoiesis Guided self organization Inception Springer pp 19 51 arXiv 1304 1842 Bibcode 2013arXiv1304 1842F ISBN 978 3 642 53734 9 Gershenson C 26 Sep 2014 Requisite Variety Autopoiesis and Self organization arXiv 1409 7475 nlin AO Highfield Roger Coveney Peter 1995 Frontiers of complexity the search for order in a chaotic world London Faber p 210 ISBN 0 571 17922 3 Ganti Tibor 2003 Eors Szathmary James Griesemer eds The Principles of Life Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198507260 Eigen M Schuster P 1977 The hypercycle a principle of natural self organization A emergence of the hypercycle Naturwissenschaften 64 11 541 565 doi 10 1007 bf00450633 PMID 593400 S2CID 42131267 Eigen M Schuster P The hypercycle a principle of natural self organization B the abstract hypercycle Naturwissenschaften 65 1 7 41 doi 10 1007 bf00420631 S2CID 1812273 Eigen M Schuster P The hypercycle a principle of natural self organization C the realistic hypercycle Naturwissenschaften 65 7 41 369 doi 10 1007 bf00420631 S2CID 1812273 Rosen R 1958 The representation of biological systems from the standpoint of the theory of categories Bull Math Biophys 20 4 317 341 doi 10 1007 BF02477890 Rosen R 1991 Life Itself a comprehensive inquiry into the nature origin and fabrication of life New York Columbia University Press Kauffman S A 1969 Metabolic stability and epigenesis in randomly constructed genetic nets J Theor Biol 22 3 437 467 Bibcode 1969JThBi 22 437K doi 10 1016 0022 5193 69 90015 0 PMID 5803332 Dyson F J 1982 A model for the origin of life J Mol Evol 18 5 344 350 Bibcode 1982JMolE 18 344D doi 10 1007 bf01733901 PMID 7120429 S2CID 30423925 Schrodinger Erwin 1944 What is Life Cambridge University Press Cornish Bowden A 2015 Tibor Ganti and Robert Rosen contrasting approaches to the same problem J Theor Biol 381 6 10 Bibcode 2015JThBi 381 6C doi 10 1016 j jtbi 2015 05 015 PMID 25988381 Letelier J C Cardenas M L Cornish Bowden A 2011 From L Homme Machine to metabolic closure steps towards understanding life J Theor Biol 286 1 100 113 Bibcode 2011JThBi 286 100L doi 10 1016 j jtbi 2011 06 033 PMID 21763318 Igamberdiev A U 2014 Time rescaling and pattern formation in biological evolution BioSystems 123 19 26 doi 10 1016 j biosystems 2014 03 002 PMID 24690545 Cornish Bowden A Cardenas M L 2020 Contrasting theories of life historical context current theories In search of an ideal theory BioSystems 188 104063 doi 10 1016 j biosystems 2019 104063 PMID 31715221 S2CID 207946798 Thompson Evan 2007 Chapter 5 Autopoiesis The organization of the living Mind in Life Biology Phenomenology and the Sciences of Mind Harvard University Press pp 91 127 ISBN 978 0 674 02511 0 Maturana Humberto Varela Francisco 1980 1972 The cognitive process Autopoiesis and Cognition The Realization of the Living 2 ed Springer ISBN 9789027710161 Bitbol M Luisi PL November 2004 Autopoiesis with or without cognition defining life at its edge Journal of the Royal Society Interface 1 1 99 107 doi 10 1098 rsif 2004 0012 PMC 1618936 PMID 16849156 Thompson Evan 2007 Mind in Life Biology Phenomenology and the Sciences of Mind Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 02511 0 Thompson Evan 2007 Cognitivism Mind in Life Biology Phenomenology and the Sciences of Mind Harvard University Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 674 02511 0 Thompson Evan 2007 Sensorimotor subjectivity Mind in Life Biology Phenomenology and the Sciences of Mind Harvard University Press p 243 ISBN 978 0 674 02511 0 Fleischaker G 1992 Autopoiesis in Systems Analysis A Debate International Journal of General Systems 21 2 131 271 doi 10 1080 03081079208945065 Swenson R 1992 Autocatakinetics Yes Autopoiesis No Steps Toward a Unified Theory of Evolutionary Ordering International Journal of General Systems 21 2 207 208 doi 10 1080 03081079208945072 Kenny V Gardner G 1988 The constructions of self organizing systems The Irish Journal of Psychology 9 1 1 24 doi 10 1080 03033910 1988 10557704 Wolfe C 1998 Critical environments postmodern theory and the pragmatics of the outside University of Minnesota Press pp 62 3 ISBN 978 0 8166 3019 6 Maturana H Varela F 1988 The Tree of Knowledge New Science Library Boston Shambhala Publications p 242 Razeto Barry Pablo October 2012 Autopoiesis 40 Years Later A Review and A Reformulation Origins of Life 42 6 543 567 Bibcode 2012OLEB 42 543R doi 10 1007 s11084 012 9297 y PMID 23054553 S2CID 8267553 via Research Gate Haraway Donna Jeanne 2016 Staying with the trouble making kin in the Chthulucene Internet Archive Durham Duke University Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 8223 6214 2 Further reading editCapra F 1997 The Web of Life Random House ISBN 978 0 385 47676 8 general introduction to the ideas behind autopoiesis Goosseff KA 2010 Autopoeisis and meaning a biological approach to Bakhtin s superaddressee Journal of Organizational Change Management 23 2 145 151 doi 10 1108 09534811011031319 Dyke C 1988 The Evolutionary Dynamics of Complex Systems A Study in Biosocial Complexity New York Oxford University Press Livingston I 2006 Between Science and Literature An Introduction to Autopoetics University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07254 3 an adaptation of autopoiesis to language Luhmann Niklas 1990 Essays on Self Reference Columbia University Press Luhmann s adaptation of autopoiesis to social systems Luisi PL February 2003 Autopoiesis a review and a reappraisal Die Naturwissenschaften 90 2 49 59 Bibcode 2003NW 90 49L doi 10 1007 s00114 002 0389 9 PMID 12590297 S2CID 10611332 biologist view of autopoiesis Maturana Humberto R Varela Francisco J 1972 Autopoiesis and cognition the realization of the living Boston studies in the philosophy and history of science Dordrecht Reidel p 141 OCLC 989554341 Varela Francisco G Maturana Humberto R Uribe R 1974 05 01 Autopoiesis The organization of living systems its characterization and a model Biosystems 5 4 187 196 doi 10 1016 0303 2647 74 90031 8 ISSN 0303 2647 PMID 4407425 Retrieved 2020 11 13 Maturana Humberto Varela Francisco 1980 Autopoiesis and Cognition The Realization of the Living 2nd ed Springer ISBN 9789027710161 Cohen RS Wartofsky MW eds 30 April 1980 Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science Vol 42 Dordecht D Reidel Publishing Co ISBN 978 90 277 1015 4 the main published reference on autopoiesis Mingers J 1994 Self Producing Systems Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers ISBN 978 0 306 44797 6 a book on the autopoiesis concept in many different areas Robb FF 1991 Accounting A Virtual Autopoietic System Systems Practice 4 3 215 235 doi 10 1007 BF01059566 S2CID 145281360 Tabbi J 2002 Cognitive Fictions Vol 2002 University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 3557 3 draws on systems theory and cognitive science to introduce autopoiesis to literary studies Varela FJ Maturana HR Uribe R 1974 Autopoiesis the organization of living systems its characterization and a model Biosystems 5 4 187 196 doi 10 1016 0303 2647 74 90031 8 PMID 4407425 one of the original papers on the concept of autopoiesis Bourgine P Stewart J 2004 Autopoiesis and cognition Artificial Life 10 3 327 45 doi 10 1162 1064546041255557 PMID 15245631 S2CID 11475918 Winograd T Flores F 1990 Understanding Computers and Cognition A New Foundation for Design Ablex Pub Corp ISBN 9780893910501 cognitive systems perspective on autopoiesisExternal links edit nbsp Look up autopoiesis in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Observer Web Autopoiesis and Enaction a website with more explanations Several papers on autopoietic theory are available through archonic net A mindmap collection of links and papers visualized by Ragnar Heil Archived 2018 04 29 at the Wayback Machine Autopoiesis and knowledge in the organization by Aquiles Limone Luis E Bastias Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Autopoiesis amp oldid 1203734475, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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