ABSTRACT

This chapter offers an opinion as to the nature of connection by examining what the philospher David Hume called the 'cement of the universe', causation. It suggests that causation is connection. The chapter deals with the search for the connectors of E-space. It shows that hermeneutics is concerned with how humans make connections between each other; and so the exploration for connectors reviews the genealogy of hermeneutic thought, especially contrasting that of Martin Heidegger to that of Max Weber. The chapter addresses the flaw by showing how neural networks, most importantly in the cortex, constitute a neurohermeneutic system that performs a neurohermeneutic process. It reviews certain aspects of hermeneutics, suggesting that Weber had envisioned a causal hermeneutics with the capacity of explaining how individuals tied antecedent with subsequent reality. The chapter also argue that some hermeneutics, Weber's, that this hermeneutics has been interested in causality, and that it leads to a neurohermeneutics.