Abstract

This theoretical paper explores the affect-logic approach to schizophrenia in light of the general complexity theories of cognition: embodied cognition, Haken’s synergetics, and Friston’s free energy principle. According to affect-logic, the mental apparatus is an embodied system open to its environment, driven by bioenergetic inputs of emotions. Emotions are rooted in goal-directed embodied states selected by evolutionary pressure for coping with specific situations such as fight, flight, attachment, and others. According to synergetics, nonlinear bifurcations and the emergence of new global patterns occur in open systems when control parameters reach a critical level. Applied to the emergence of psychotic states, synergetics and the proposed energetic understanding of emotions lead to the hypothesis that critical levels of emotional tension may be responsible for the transition from normal to psychotic modes of functioning in vulnerable individuals. In addition, the free energy principle through learning suggests that psychotic symptoms correspond to alternative modes of minimizing free energy, which then entails distorted perceptions of the body, self, and reality. This synthetic formulation has implications for novel therapeutic and preventive strategies in the treatment of psychoses, among these are milieu-therapeutic approaches of the Soteria type that focus on a sustained reduction of emotional tension and phenomenologically oriented methods for improving the perception of body, self, and reality.

Highlights

  • Published: 1 December 2021During recent decades, several comprehensive theoretical accounts have emerged that are potentially relevant for a better understanding of schizophrenia, among them are the concepts of affect-logic [1,2,3], embodiment [4], synergetics [5,6], and the free energy principle [7]

  • Several comprehensive theoretical accounts have emerged that are potentially relevant for a better understanding of schizophrenia, among them are the concepts of affect-logic [1,2,3], embodiment [4], synergetics [5,6], and the free energy principle [7]

  • The free energy principle shares the fundaments of affect-logic, emperceived and what can be predicted, influencing the generative models and the model bodiment, and synergetic formulations: For example, all rest upon a circular causality that evidence with the goal of improving adaptation to the environment

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Summary

Introduction

Several comprehensive theoretical accounts have emerged that are potentially relevant for a better understanding of schizophrenia, among them are the concepts of affect-logic [1,2,3], embodiment [4], synergetics [5,6], and the free energy principle [7] These theories were developed largely independent of each other and remained only loosely connected in spite of interesting commonalities. Three general dynamical-systems approaches were identified: embodied cognition (recently extended to 4E cognition: [14]), Haken’s synergetics, and Friston’s free energy principle These theories, described in the following, have remained only loosely connected with each other in spite of apparent commonalities.

Affect-logic
Embodied Cognition
Such enactive sensory-motor loops are the basis of phenomena of nonverbal
Synergetics
Free Energy Principle
Discussion
Therapeutic Implications
Open Questions
Endnotes
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