49 | -- | 52 | Alain Berthoz. Preface |
53 | -- | 58 | Luciano Boi, Carlos Lobo. Geometry and phenomenology of the living: Limits and possibilities of mathematization, complexity and individuation in biological sciences |
59 | -- | 63 | Misha Gromov. Mathematics of life spaces: continuation of the 2018 large dimensions course |
65 | -- | 71 | Jürgen Jost. Biology, geometry and information |
73 | -- | 103 | Luciano Boi. A reappraisal of the form - function problem. Theory and phenomenology |
105 | -- | 123 | Athel Cornish-Bowden, María Luz Cárdenas. The essence of life revisited: how theories can shed light on it |
125 | -- | 140 | Hans Liljenström. Consciousness, decision making, and volition: freedom beyond chance and necessity |
141 | -- | 163 | Vincent Fleury, Alexis Peaucelle, Anick Abourachid, Olivia Plateau. Second-order division in sectors as a prepattern for sensory organs in vertebrate development |
165 | -- | 173 | Maël Montévil. Historicity at the heart of biology |
175 | -- | 202 | Carlos Lobo. The limits of the mathematization of the living and the idea of formal morphology of the living world following Husserlian phenomenology |
203 | -- | 211 | Paul-Antoine Miquel, Su-Young Hwang. On biological individuation |
213 | -- | 231 | Saverio Forestiero. The historical nature of biological complexity and the ineffectiveness of the mathematical approach to it |