I am a rheumatologist born in Paris in 1960, currently practicing in Noumea, New Caledonia. I created Rhumatopratique, a reference french website on rheumatology, and several blogs on the human sciences. Since 2010, I developed a unifying theory of the mind, aimed at jointly satisfying the neuroscientific and philosophical approaches. It is a hierarchical, self-organized conception of the mind called Stratium. Its use is particularly useful for medical care, separating the different levels of information about a disease or suffering, from biological to self-awareness.
Then I extended this theory of mental complexity to the rest of observable…
I am a rheumatologist born in Paris in 1960, currently practicing in Noumea, New Caledonia. I created Rhumatopratique, a reference french website on rheumatology, and several blogs on the human sciences. Since 2010, I developed a unifying theory of the mind, aimed at jointly satisfying the neuroscientific and philosophical approaches. It is a hierarchical, self-organized conception of the mind called Stratium. Its use is particularly useful for medical care, separating the different levels of information about a disease or suffering, from biological to self-awareness.
Then I extended this theory of mental complexity to the rest of observable reality, to make it a continuity of the complex dimension, around a meta-principle, the T<>D. It is about the conflict, in everything, between its individualizing part (the T of soliTary) and its collectivizing part (the D of soliDary). In Surimposium, a book devoid of any mysticism, the birth of this metaprincipe is shown in elementary physical processes.