ABSTRACT

The necessary inner adaptation for the theory presupposes communication and not causality as the original ontological relation. Causality is necessary for external adaptation, for action, for production, for the change of something into something else. A fascinating thought parallel to the theory of reflection, can be found in the research on the structure of the central nervous system called biosemiotics. Every reflection can survey a great number of original single communications and comprise them as a unit comparable to Morse's dot-and-dash signals which finally in reflection make up a word. The access to such a form of communication should be dependent on the possibilities of the right hemisphere. Also, the left hemisphere's dominance and its resulting ego-unity we understand as an inner adaptation to the unity of God even if we take into account the qualities of thought and action as instruments for outer adaptation.