Torday and Miller, Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, 19 April 2016. The abstract:
"Hobson and Friston have hypothesized that the brain must actively dissipate heat in order to process information (Hobson et al., 2014).
This physiologic trait is functionally homologous with the first
instantation of life formed by lipids suspended in water forming
micelles- allowing the reduction in entropy (heat dissipation). This
circumvents the Second Law of Thermodynamics permitting the transfer of
information between living entities, enabling them to perpetually glean
information from the environment, that is felt by many to correspond to
evolution per se. The next evolutionary milestone was the advent
of cholesterol, embedded in the cell membranes of primordial eukaryotes,
facilitating metabolism, oxygenation and locomotion, the triadic basis
for vertebrate evolution. Lipids were key to homeostatic regulation of
calcium, forming calcium channels. Cell membrane cholesterol also
fostered metazoan evolution by forming lipid rafts for receptor-mediated
cell-cell signaling, the origin of the endocrine system. The eukaryotic
cell membrane exapted to all complex physiologic traits, including the
lung and brain, which are molecularly homologous through the function of
neuregulin, mediating both lung development and myelinization of
neurons. That cooption later exapted as endothermy during the water-land
transition (Torday, 2015a),
perhaps being the functional homolog for brain heat dissipation and
conscious/mindful information processing. The skin and brain similarly
share molecular homologies through the “skin-brain” hypothesis, giving
insight to the cellular-molecular “arc” of consciousness from its
unicellular origins to integrated physiology. This perspective on the
evolution of the central nervous system clarifies self-organization,
reconciling thermodynamic and informational definitions of the
underlying biophysical mechanisms, thereby elucidating relations between
the predictive capabilities of the brain and self-organizational
processes."
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