In a world which is being inevitably interpreted through believes and needs, the book “How Physical Principles Guide our Behavior” takes an unorthodox structuralist approach in hypothesizing certain fundamental aspects of the perceptive mind mechanisms involved in human responses to environmental stimuli. Unlike the conventional macro-level exploration of environmentally triggered human behavior and meso-level interpretations of brain neurophysiology generating perception, the book hypothesizes that mind mechanisms have evolved to reflect the natural laws behind the “struggles” which have led to their micro-level development, and that by adopting a bottom-up approach that uses building blocks made of such physical principles, one might be able to decrypt certain facets of the mind mechanisms. Accompanying these speculations are numerous other unconventional ideas. One can highlight for instance the suggested properties of individuality and broad individuality accompanying the reduced physical descriptions of the sensoresponses, the layered perception model, the individual energy perception as a genetically-driven observation/assessment layer and its energetic self reference, the concept of psychoenergetics and its cognitive impacts (including, for example, the mechanistic role of emotions in decision-making and the genetic-energetic origins of our fears which additionally affect the latter), genetic lensing, phenomenological experiences as means of sensory energy release and dissipation, “boundary” changes in mind mechanisms, and various other stipulated concepts. While the book is not aimed for popular science audience, I hope that some of its hypotheses and insights will be heard by, criticized, and further developed both by scholars in the fields of philosophy and brain sciences, and by other interested readers.
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