Not exact matches
We don't know how it is
grounded in
brain activity, nor whether it is an emergent capacity of the evolution of organisms at all, so we can't possibly know whether it is bound to emerge from the evolution of other physical
systems.
Biomedical engineer James Collins, who invented the insoles, knew that the act of walking is itself a complex
system — a dynamic interplay of the
ground, the walker's footwear, the countless nerves that enervate the feet, and the
brain that governs the process.
In the context of robotics, this meant that sensory
systems would send data up to a central computer (the robot
brain), and the computer would
grind away to calculate the right commands.
After with a good
grounding in deep learning
systems, which mimic the human
brain to a degree, we got to the interesting stuff: inscrutability, hidden factors and confounding variables.
My orientation is
grounded in attachment theory and an understanding of how the
brain effects our emotional
systems.
The limbic
system, which is part of our mammalian
brain, can for example perceive a snake and interpret it as dangerous, even before we have rationally understood that there is a snake on the
ground.