Refine
Document Type
- Preprint (12) (remove)
Language
- English (12) (remove)
Keywords
- Landnutzung (4)
- Ökosystemleistungen (4)
- evolution (3)
- evolutionary algorithms (3)
- multi-criterial optimization (3)
- optimization (3)
- simulation (3)
- structure (3)
- structure-generating processes (3)
- Ökosystem (3)
- Driving forces (2)
- Geoinformationssystem (2)
- Strukturbildung (2)
- ecosystem services (2)
- Accounting (1)
- Aegean Islands (1)
- Agrarlandschaft (1)
- Agrarpolitik (1)
- Agricultural intensification (1)
- Agricultural landscape (1)
- Agroforestry (1)
- Altgriechisch (1)
- Bewusstsein (1)
- Bibel / Kommentar (1)
- Biosphere reserve (1)
- Biosphärenreservat (1)
- Common Agricultural Policy (1)
- Cultural ecosystem services (1)
- Deutschland (1)
- Ecosystem services (1)
- Ecosystem services bundles (1)
- Edition (1)
- Exegese (1)
- GIS (1)
- Germany (1)
- Grazing intensity (1)
- Griechisch (1)
- Gödel (1)
- Heisenberg (1)
- Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) (1)
- Kohlenstoffmärkte (1)
- Kulturelle Ökosystemleistungen (1)
- Kulturlandschaft (1)
- Land-use transition (1)
- Land-use transitions (1)
- Landscape dynamics (1)
- Landscape ecology (1)
- Landscape values (1)
- Landschaftsökologie (1)
- Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (1)
- Participatory mapping (1)
- Partizipative Kartierung (1)
- Psalmenkommentar (1)
- Quercus macrolepis (1)
- Schwäbische Alb (1)
- bundles (1)
- carbon market (1)
- cross-sectoral policies (1)
- decision theory (1)
- decodability (1)
- human well-being (1)
- multifunctional landscapes (1)
- non-market valuation (1)
- payments for ecosystem services (PES) (1)
- quantum physics (1)
- trees outside forests (1)
- Ägäische Inseln (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (12)
Modern brain research related to consciousness has resulted in many interesting in- sights, for example into the neurobiological basis of attention and of language. In biological terms, human consciousness appears as a system’s feature of our brain, with neural processes strictly following the laws of physics. This does not necessarily imply, however, that there can be a general and comprehensive scientific theory of consciousness. Predictions of the extent to which such a theory may become possi- ble vary widely in the scientific community. There are reasons - not only practical but also epistemological - why the brain-mind relation may not be fully decodable by finite procedures. In particular, analogies with mathematical theorems of un- decidability suggest that self-referential features of consciousness, such as multiple self-representations like those involved in strategic thought, may not be fully resolv- able by brain analysis. Assuming such limitations exist, this implies that ob jective analysis cannot exhaust sub jective experience in principle. A person’s consciousness and will are accessible to external observation only within limits. In some respects, we do not even learn to know ourselves except by our actions. It thus appears that a scientific look at consciousness and the human mind, combining universal physi- calism with epistemological scepticism, is not inconsistent with certain concepts of sub jectivity that are current in the humanities, despite all the differences in the style and terminology of discourse.