Nautilus

A Neuroscientist’s Theory of Everything

Karl Friston wanted me to know he had plenty of time. That wasn’t quite true. He just didn’t want our conversation—about his passion, the physics of mental life—to end. Once it did, he would have to step outside, have a cigarette, and get straight back to modeling COVID-19. I caught the University College London neuroscientist at 6 p.m., his time, just after he had sat on a panel at a COVID-related press conference. He apologized for still having on a tie and seemed grateful to me for supplying some “light relief and a distraction.”

A decade ago, Friston published a paper called “The Free-Energy Principle: A Unified Brain Theory?” It spells out the idea that the brain works as an editor, constantly minimizing, “squashing” input from the outside world, and in the process balancing internal models of the world with sensations and perceptions. Life, in Friston’s view, is about minimizing free energy. But it’s not just a view of the brain. It’s more like a theory of everything. Friston’s free-energy theory practically sets your brain on fire when you read it, and it has become one of the most-cited papers in the world of neuroscience. This May, Friston published a new paper, “Sentience and the Origins of Consciousness,” that takes his ideas into new intellectual territory.

NOT A FAN OF SURPRISES: Karl Friston (above) has argued that lifeforms, in order to survive, must limit the long-term average of surprise they experience in their sensory exchanges with the world. Being surprised too often is tantamount to a failure to resist a natural tendency toward disorder.Kate Peters

Friston, currently a Wellcome Trust Principal Fellow and Scientific Director of the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, invented statistical parametric mapping, a brain scanning technique that has allowed neuroscientists to assess, as never before, the activity in specific brain regions and their roles in behavior. The discoveries he’s helping to make about the nature of the brain come out of a psychiatrist’s concern for the well-being of his patients, suffering from chronic

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