Was
ist Leben wirklich? Autopoiesis
"If everybody would agree that their current
reality is A reality, and that what we essentially share is our
capacity for constructing a reality, then perhaps we could all
agree on a meta-agreement for computing a reality that would mean
survival and dignity for everyone on the planet, rather than each
group being sold on a particular way of doing things."
Francisco J. Varela
Geboren am 7. September 1946 in Chile
Gestorben am 28. Mai 2001 in Paris
Francisco Varela wurde 1946 in Chile geboren und
lehrte an der Ecole Polytechnique Universität in Paris.
Anfang der 70er Jahre erkannte Varela, dass die
schrittweisen Sequenzen von Zellautomaten, die ideal für
Computersimulationen geeignet sind, ein leistungsfähiges
Werkzeug zur Simulation autopoietischer Netzwerke darstellt.
1974 gelang es ihm, zusammen mit Humberto
Maturana und dem Informatiker Ricardo Uribe, die Konstruktion
der entsprechenden Computersimulation. ( F. Capra "Lebensnetz"
Seite 224-227). Der von Varela und seinen Kollegen studierte Zellautomat
war eines der ersten Beispiele dafür, wie sich die selbstorganisierenden
Netzwerke lebender Systeme simulieren lassen.
Neben der Entwicklung von Computersimulationen verschiedener
selbstorganisierter, autopoietischer wie nicht-autopoietischer
Netzwerke ist den Biologen und Chemikern vor kurzem auch die Synthese
autopoietischer Systeme im Labor gelungen. 1989 wurde diese Möglichkeit
von Varela und Pier Luigi Luisi theoretisch dargelegt und anschliessend
in zwei Arten von Experimenten von Luisi realisiert. Diese neuen
theoretischen und experimentellen Entwicklungen haben die Debatte
darüber, was denn das Leben in seiner minimalen Form ausmache,
entschieden verschärft. Neuerdings hält man in der Wissenschaft
auch virtuelles Leben für möglich.
Francisco Varela starb am 28. Mai 2001 im Alter
von 54 Jahren.
Ausgewählte Werke
Der Baum der Erkenntnis. Die biologischen Wurzeln
des menschlichen Erkennens.
von Humberto R. Maturana, Francisco J. Varela
Traum, Schlaf und Tod. Grenzbereiche des Bewußtseins.
von Francisco J. Varela
Kognitionswissenschaft, Kognitionstechnik. Eine
Skizze aktueller Perspektiven.
von Francisco J. Varela
Biografische Notitz von PSYCHE
(http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au/v7/psyche-7-12-thompson.html)
Francisco J. Varela (1946-2001)
It is with great sadness that I announce the death
of Francisco Varela, who passed away at his home in Paris, on
May 28, 2001. With his passing, the science of consciousness has
lost one of its most brilliant, original, creative, and compassionate
thinkers.
Francisco Varela was born September 7, 1946 in Chile.
As a child and teenager, he received a strong classical education
from the German Lyceum in Santiago, which instilled in him a deep
and lifelong appreciation of literature, art, philosophy, and
science. He received his M.Sc. (Licenciatura) in Biology in 1967
from the University of Chile in Santiago, where he studied with
the neurobiologist Humberto R. Maturana (well known for his classic
work with Jerome Lettvin on the neurophysiology of vision in frogs
and for his subsequent work with Varela on autopoiesis). According
to the story Francisco was fond of telling, as a young undergraduate
he one day burst into Maturana's office and enthusiastically declared
that he wanted "to study the role of mind in the universe."
Maturana responded, "My boy, you've come to the right place."
From 1968 to 1970 Francisco followed in the footsteps
of his mentor Maturana by pursuing graduate studies in Biology
at Harvard University. His doctoral thesis, "Insect retinas:
information processing in the compound eye," was written
under the direction of Torsten Wiesel (who shared a Nobel Prize
with Davd Hubel in 1981).
With his Ph.D. in hand at the young age of twenty-three,
Francisco declined a position as researcher at Harvard and another
as Assistant Professor at another American university, choosing
instead to return to Chile to help build a scientific research
community. It was during these years of 1970 to 1973 that Varela
and Maturana, now colleagues at the University of Chile, formulated
their famous theory of autopoiesis (Maturana & Varela 1973,
1980; see Varela 1996a for a personal recounting of this time
and work). According to this theory, living systems are autonomous
systems (endogenously controlled and self-organizing), and the
minimal form of autonomy necessary and sufficient for characterizing
biological life is autopoiesis, i.e., self-production having the
form of an operationally closed, membrane-bounded, reaction network.
Maturana and Varela also held that autopoiesis defines cognition
in its minimal biological form as the "sense-making"
capacity of life; and that the nervous system, as a result of
the autopoiesis of its component neurons, is not an input-output
information processing system, but rather an autonomous, operationally
closed network, whose basic functional elements are invariant
patterns of activity in neuronal ensembles (see Varela 1979).
These ideas, dating back to the early seventies, not only anticipated
but laid the groundwork for ideas that were to become prominent
much later in the nineties, in scientific fields as diverse as
the origins of life (Fleischaker 1994), the chemical synthesis
of minimal living systems (Bachman et al. 1992), artificial life
(Varela & Bourgine 1991), theoretical immunology (Varela &
Coutinho 1991), dynamical neuroscience (Varela et al. 2001), and
embodied cognition (Varela et al. 1991).
When Francisco returned to Chile, he arrived on
September 2, 1970, two days before the election of Salvador Allende
(the first Marxist politician ever elected in a free election).
Three years later Chile was in turmoil, and Francisco, a strong
supporter of the Allende government, was forced to flee with his
family after the military coup of General Augusto Pinochet overthrew
the Allende goverment on September 11, 1973. They fled first to
Costa Rica, and then eventually to the United States, where Francisco
took up a position as Assistant Professor at the University of
Colorado Medical School in Denver. There he taught and pursued
his research until 1978. In 1978-79, he spent a year in New York
at the Brain Research Laboratories of the NYU Medical School,
and as scholar in residence at the Lindisfarne Association, and
then returned to Chile in 1980, staying there until 1985 (with
a year spent in 1984 as a Visiting Senior Researcher at the Max
Planck Institute for Brain Research in Frankfurt). In 1986 he
moved to Paris, where he was based at the Institut des Neurosciences
and at CREA (Centre de Recherche en Epistémologie Appliqué).
In 1988, he was appointed to be a Director of Research at CNRS
(Centre Nationale de Recherche Scientifique), a position he held
until his death.
Francisco's years in Paris, up until the very month of his passing,
were remarkably full and productive by any standard; that he suffered
from Hepatitis C from the early 1990s onward, including receiving
a liver transplant in 1998, makes his life and work during this
time truly wonderful and inspiring.
During these years Francisco pursued two main complementary
lines of work: experimental studies using multiple electrode recordings
and mathematical analysis of large-scale neuronal integration
during cognitive processes; and philosophical and empirical studies
of the "neurophenomenology" of human consciousness (see
Varela 1996b).
In a 1998 study published in Nature, Francisco and
his colleagues in Paris showed for the first time that the human
perception of meaningful complex forms (high contrast faces or
"Mooney figures") is accompanied by phase-locked, synchronous
oscillations in distinct brain regions (Rodriguez et al. 1998).
In an important review article published one month before his
death, in the April 2001 issue of Nature Reviews Neuroscience,
Francisco and his colleagues presented a new viewpoint on what
they call the "brainweb": the emergence of a unified
cognitive moment depends on large-scale brain integration, whose
most plausible mechanism is the formation of dynamic links mediated
by synchrony over multiple frequency bands (Varela et al. 2001).
In addition to these studies, Francisco published numerous technical,
experimental and mathematical papers on the nonlinear dynamical
analysis of brain activity, including groundbreaking studies on
the prediction of seizures in epileptic patients prior to the
onset of symptoms (Martinerie et al. 1998; see also Schiff 1998).
Francisco also firmly believed, however, that such
scientific research needs to be complemented by detailed phenomenological
investigations of human experience as it is lived and verbally
articulated in the first person. To this end, he published a number
of original and innovative phenomenological studies of aspects
of human consciousness (e.g., Varela 1999; Varela and Depraz 2000),
including a profound and moving meditation on his own illness
and the phenomenology of organ transplantation experience (Varela
2001). He also co-edited two important collections, one on phenomenology
and cognitive science (Petitot et al. 1999), and the other on
first-person methods in the science of consciousness (Varela and
Shear 1999).
Since the mid-seventies, Francisco was a serious
practitioner of Tibetan Buddhist meditation and a student of Buddhist
psychology and philosophy. His conviction that this tradition
and Western cognitive science have much to gain from each other
provided another, ultimately spiritual and existential dimension,
to his work. This dimension was the subject of his 1991 book (co-written
with Evan Thompson and Eleanor Rosch), The Embodied Mind: Cognitive
Science and Human Experience. He was one of the key members of
the Advisory Board of the Mind and Life Institute, which organizes
private meetings between Tenzin Gyatso, His Holiness the Fourteenth
Dalai Lama, and Western scientists (see Varela 1997). The ninth
and most recent of these meetings was held May 21-22, 2001, at
the University of Wisconsin, Madison, on the theme of "Transformations
of Mind, Brain, and Emotion: Neurobiological and Bio-Behavioral
Research on Meditation," directed by Professor Richard Davidson.
This meeting was a dream-come-true for Francisco: the best of
Western brain science and Buddhist meditative practice and psychology
brought together in the context of cognitive neuroscientific research
on the cognitive and emotional effects of meditation evident in
long-term practitioners. Francisco was to present his studies
and findings using EEG and MEG methods at the morning session
of May 22, but sadly was unable to be there because of his illness.
His Ph.D. student, Antoine Lutz, presented the material in his
stead, and a live web-cam was set up so that Francisco could watch
the proceedings from his apartment in Paris.
Although the passing of Francisco, especially at
a time when his rich and diverse research program was coming to
such fruition, is an immeasurable loss, the spirit of his unique
and exemplary style of research has never been stronger, and will
continue to inspire many of us for years to come.
Francisco was an active and enthusiastic supporter of many interdisciplinary
groups devoted to the study of consciousness. In the seventies
and eighties, he served on the faculty of the Naropa Institute
in Boulder, Colorado, and was a Fellow of the Lindisfarne Association
in New York City. He was a founding member of the Association
for the Scientific Study of Consciousness (ASSC) and was actively
considering hosting the 2002 ASSC meeting until shortly before
his death. He was a strong supporter of the Center for Consciousness
Studies at the University of Arizona at Tucson, and served on
the Editorial Advisory Board of the Journal of Consciousness Studies.
He was also instrumental in the creation of a new journal, Phenomenology
and the Cognitive Sciences, and was to serve as its Consulting
Editor.
Francisco died calm and at peace, in the loving
embrace of his family, at 5AM, May 28, 2001. I visited him several
days before, and was deeply touched by the serenity, kindness,
and intelligence he continued to radiate. He leaves his wife,
Amy Cohen Varela, and their son Gabriel, and his former wife Leonor,
and their daughers Alejandra and Leonor, and son Javier. He will
be deeply missed.
Evan Thompson
Department of Philosophy and Centre for Vision Research
York University