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dc.contributor.author Tozzi, Arturo
dc.contributor.author Peters, James
dc.date.accessioned 2025-04-08T06:01:56Z
dc.date.available 2025-04-08T06:01:56Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.issn 1871-4080
dc.identifier.uri http://dspace.adiyaman.edu.tr:8080/xmlui/handle/20.500.12414/6018
dc.description.abstract Starting from the tenets of human imagination, i.e., the concepts of lines, points and infinity, we provide a biological demonstration that the skeptical claim "human beings cannot attain knowledge of the world" holds true. We show that the Euclidean account of the point as "that of which there is no part" is just a conceptual device produced by our brain, untenable in our physical/biological realm: currently used terms like "lines, surfaces and volumes" label non-existent, arbitrary properties. We elucidate the psychological and neuroscientific features hardwired in our brain that lead us humans to think to points and lines as truly occurring in our environment. Therefore, our current scientific descriptions of objects' shapes, graphs and biological trajectories in phase spaces need to be revisited, leading to a proper portrayal of the real world's events: miniscule bounded physical surface regions stand for the basic objects in a traversal of spacetime, instead of the usual Euclidean points. Our account makes it possible to erase of a painstaking problem that causes many theories to break down and/or being incapable of describing extreme events: the unwanted occurrence of infinite values in equations. We propose a novel approach, based on point-free geometrical standpoints, that banishes infinitesimals, leads to a tenable physical/biological geometry compatible with human reasoning and provides a region-based topological account of the power laws endowed in nervous activities. We conclude that points, lines, volumes and infinity do not describe the world, rather they are fictions introduced by ancient surveyors of land surfaces. tr
dc.language.iso en tr
dc.publisher SPRINGER tr
dc.subject Continuum tr
dc.subject Physical equations tr
dc.subject Topology tr
dc.subject Curvature tr
dc.subject Infinity tr
dc.title Points and lines inside human brains tr
dc.type Article tr
dc.contributor.authorID 0000-0001-8426-4860 tr
dc.contributor.department Univ North Texas, Ctr Nonlinear Sci tr
dc.contributor.department Univ Manitoba, Dept Elect & Comp Engn tr
dc.contributor.department Adiyaman Univ, Dept Math, tr
dc.identifier.endpage 428 tr
dc.identifier.issue 5 tr
dc.identifier.startpage 417 tr
dc.identifier.volume 13 tr
dc.source.title COGNITIVE NEURODYNAMICS tr


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