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      Mental causation: an evolutionary perspective

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          Abstract

          The relationship between consciousness and individual agency is examined from a bottom-up evolutionary perspective, an approach somewhat different from other ways of dealing with the issue, but one relevant to the question of animal consciousness. Two ways are identified that would decouple the two, allowing consciousness of a limited kind to exist without agency: (1) reflex pathways that incorporate conscious sensations as an intrinsic component (InCs), and (2) reflexes that are consciously conditioned and dependent on synaptic plasticity but not memory (CCRs). Whether InCs and CCRs exist as more than hypothetical constructs is not clear, and InCs are in any case limited to theories where consciousness depends directly on EM field-based effects. Consciousness with agency, as we experience it, then belongs in a third category that allows for deliberate choice of alternative actions (DCs), where the key difference between this and CCR-level pathways is that DCs require access to explicit memory systems whereas CCRs do not. CCRs are nevertheless useful from a heuristic standpoint as a conceptual model for how conscious inputs could act to refine routine behaviors while allowing evolution to optimize phenomenal experience (i.e., qualia) in the absence of individual agency, a somewhat counterintuitive result. However, so long as CCRs are not a required precondition for the evolution of memory-dependent DC-level processes, the later could have evolved first. If so, the adaptive benefit of consciousness when it first evolved may be linked as much to the role it plays in encoding memories as to any other function. The possibility that CCRs are more than a theoretical construct, and have played a role in the evolution of consciousness, argues against theories of consciousness focussed exclusively on higher-order functions as the appropriate way to deal with consciousness as it first evolved, as it develops in the early postnatal period of life, or with the conscious experiences of animals other than ourselves. An evolutionary perspective also resolves the problem of free will, that it is best treated as a property of a species rather than the individuals belonging to that species whereas, in contrast, agency is an attribute of individuals.

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          Empathy: Its ultimate and proximate bases

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            Memory systems of the brain: a brief history and current perspective.

            The idea that memory is composed of distinct systems has a long history but became a topic of experimental inquiry only after the middle of the 20th century. Beginning about 1980, evidence from normal subjects, amnesic patients, and experimental animals converged on the view that a fundamental distinction could be drawn between a kind of memory that is accessible to conscious recollection and another kind that is not. Subsequent work shifted thinking beyond dichotomies to a view, grounded in biology, that memory is composed of multiple separate systems supported, for example, by the hippocampus and related structures, the amygdala, the neostriatum, and the cerebellum. This article traces the development of these ideas and provides a current perspective on how these brain systems operate to support behavior.
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              The "sense of agency" and its underlying cognitive and neural mechanisms.

              The sense of agency is a central aspect of human self-consciousness and refers to the experience of oneself as the agent of one's own actions. Several different cognitive theories on the sense of agency have been proposed implying divergent empirical approaches and results, especially with respect to neural correlates. A multifactorial and multilevel model of the sense of agency may provide the most constructive framework for integrating divergent theories and findings, meeting the complex nature of this intriguing phenomenon.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                URI : https://loop.frontiersin.org/people/996176/overviewRole: Role:
                Journal
                Front Psychol
                Front Psychol
                Front. Psychol.
                Frontiers in Psychology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-1078
                29 April 2024
                2024
                : 15
                : 1394669
                Affiliations
                Department of Biology, University of Victoria , Victoria, BC, Canada
                Author notes

                Edited by: Antonino Raffone, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

                Reviewed by: Jon Mallatt, Washington State University, United States

                Giorgio Marchetti, Mind, Consciousness and Language Research Center, Italy

                *Correspondence: Thurston Lacalli, lacalli@ 123456uvic.ca
                Article
                10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1394669
                11089241
                38741757
                5395316d-6183-4e92-9b46-5e222502c835
                Copyright © 2024 Lacalli.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 01 March 2024
                : 16 April 2024
                Page count
                Figures: 4, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 84, Pages: 13, Words: 12745
                Funding
                The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Funds to support this work were received from the L. G. Harrison Research Trust.
                Categories
                Psychology
                Hypothesis and Theory
                Custom metadata
                Consciousness Research

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                animal consciousness,epiphenomenalism,agency,free will,em field,memory theories of consciousness

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