From Reflex to Functional System: How Results Organize Behavior
Classical physiology began with a disarmingly simple picture: a stimulus arrives, travels through a reflex arc , and produces a response. The world “presses” on the organism, and the organism reacts. This model works well for a knee jerk or a pupil constriction. It works much less well for almost everything that matters in real life. A living being does not merely echo what is happening right now. A person anticipates, weighs options, remembers previous outcomes, compares risks, and takes into account motives, values, and social context. An animal, too, does not simply “jump at a sound”; it evaluates whether the sound means prey, predator, or something indifferent. The linear formula “stimulus → reflex → response” proved too narrow for this layered, time‑extended organization of behavior. Functional Systems Theory , developed by P. K. Anokhin , shifts the center of the picture. What matters most is neither the external stimulus nor an isolated reflex arc, but the useful result: the sta...