I'm reading the book "Psychological Commentaries on the Teaching of Gurdjieff and Ouspensky - tome 1" by Maurice Nicoll and today I read a section about the brain that I found interesting and showing in a certain manner that the brain has many choices to rewire his own brain.
That looks like a really interesting read!
Generally, the brain follows the same natural laws of self regulation that all of nature does. So long as extrinsic factors such as human beings don't contaminate the system, the self regulation works well. This really would seem to be the same self regulation that David Bohm talks of in the implicate order (not that I am very familiar with that). But when the brain's self regulation is contaminated by factors such as stress, it starts to lose its ability to self regulate, or it can lose it almost completely (similar to blood sugar regulation and diabetes). NO is providing the information so that the brain can get back on track.
During my discussions with researchers Corinne Fournier and Pierre Bohn, they talked very much about the Power Law and distribution of electrical events in the brain and their magnitude. They explained how a well-optimised brain will come close to the typical power law graph (mathematicians will understand this far more than I do). One of their explanations about how NO works is that in a poorly regulated brain, there are too many large sized electrical events, and these are precisely the events being interrupted by NO. So NO returns the brain to its intrinsic and natural functioning, in line with power laws that have been observed in all natural systems.