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The Path from Matter to Thought

The Mirror of Others and the Birth of the “Self”

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The Hard Problem of Consciousness

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Global Workspace Theory
Imagine that you are walking down a street without thinking much about anything. The day simply unfolds. Your eyes glide across shop windows, people pass by you, somewhere in the distance a conversation can be heard, your steps alternate evenly. All of this is happening – quietly, smoothly, almost silently. And yet, if you think about it, at that moment an enormous amount of information is being processed inside you. Colors, shapes, movements, sounds, memories, expectations. An entire world is being arranged within you… but you do not “see” all of it. It is as if most of it remains in the periphery, like a background that simply exists.
Then something changes. A sharp sound. Or someone’s voice saying your name. Or a sudden movement in your peripheral vision. And without consciously deciding, your attention gathers. Everything else fades. The moment becomes sharper. This is not just another signal. It is something that “comes forward.” And this is exactly where the Global Workspace Theory tries to capture what is happening. Your brain does not work as one whole, but as many separate processes – quiet, specialized, almost independent. One “looks,” another “listens,” a third “predicts,” a fourth “remembers.” Most of them never become part of your consciousness. They simply do their work. But sometimes something crosses an invisible boundary. Not because it is the strongest. Not because it is the brightest. But because, in some way, it has become significant enough.
And then – instead of remaining local, hidden in one part of the brain – it spreads. Like light suddenly filling a room. Different parts of the brain begin to “talk” about the same thing. The information no longer belongs to one small process. It becomes common. Accessible. Shared. And this feeling – that you “know,” that you “see,” that you “are aware” – arises precisely there. Not in the information itself, but in its spread. As if the thought is no longer locked in one room, but echoes throughout the entire house. In this sense, consciousness is not a stream of everything happening inside you. It is rather a carefully selected excerpt – that which was “important enough” to be shared everywhere.
And if you look more closely at your own experience, you will sense it: how many things happen without you noticing them. And how few of them suddenly become clear, distinct, almost illuminated from within. Exactly these moments – when something comes out of the darkness of the background and becomes the center of your experience – are what this theory calls consciousness. Not as a mystery that appears from nothing. But as a moment when your brain stops whispering to itself… and begins to speak out loud.
Global Workspace Theory

Then something changes. A sharp sound. Or someone’s voice saying your name. Or a sudden movement in your peripheral vision. And without consciously deciding, your attention gathers. Everything else fades. The moment becomes sharper. This is not just another signal. It is something that “comes forward.” And this is exactly where the Global Workspace Theory tries to capture what is happening. Your brain does not work as one whole, but as many separate processes – quiet, specialized, almost independent. One “looks,” another “listens,” a third “predicts,” a fourth “remembers.” Most of them never become part of your consciousness. They simply do their work. But sometimes something crosses an invisible boundary. Not because it is the strongest. Not because it is the brightest. But because, in some way, it has become significant enough.
And then – instead of remaining local, hidden in one part of the brain – it spreads. Like light suddenly filling a room. Different parts of the brain begin to “talk” about the same thing. The information no longer belongs to one small process. It becomes common. Accessible. Shared. And this feeling – that you “know,” that you “see,” that you “are aware” – arises precisely there. Not in the information itself, but in its spread. As if the thought is no longer locked in one room, but echoes throughout the entire house. In this sense, consciousness is not a stream of everything happening inside you. It is rather a carefully selected excerpt – that which was “important enough” to be shared everywhere.
And if you look more closely at your own experience, you will sense it: how many things happen without you noticing them. And how few of them suddenly become clear, distinct, almost illuminated from within. Exactly these moments – when something comes out of the darkness of the background and becomes the center of your experience – are what this theory calls consciousness. Not as a mystery that appears from nothing. But as a moment when your brain stops whispering to itself… and begins to speak out loud.
Integrated Information Theory
Imagine that you are sitting somewhere quietly and suddenly realize: “I am experiencing something.” You see colors, hear sounds, have thoughts. This is consciousness. Most theories start from the brain and ask how it produces it. Giulio Tononi turns the question upside down: he says – let us begin with the experience itself and ask what properties a system must have in order to have such an experience.
And here comes his idea: consciousness is not just information. It is not enough for there to be a lot of data. What matters is that this information is “glued” into a single whole, so that you cannot tear it into independent parts without destroying the experience itself.
Think of it this way – if you have many separate devices working independently, each doing something on its own, there is no shared picture. There is no single “I” experiencing all of it together. Now imagine the brain: billions of neurons that constantly influence one another. Information does not merely exist – it is intertwined. When you see something, it is not just vision – it connects with memory, emotions, expectations. All of this becomes one whole experience.
This “becoming one whole” is the key. The theory calls it integrated information and denotes it with Φ (phi). It is like a measure of how indivisible the system is as an experience. If you can cut it into parts and nothing essential is lost – it has no consciousness. But if every division destroys something important – then you have consciousness.
And here it becomes interesting. According to this idea, there is no sharp boundary between “has consciousness” and “does not have consciousness.” There are degrees. A human brain has a very high Φ – that is why our experience is rich and complex. But a very simple system may have a tiny, almost zero, but not entirely zero Φ. This leads to the rather strange, almost philosophical idea close to panpsychism – that consciousness may exist to different degrees everywhere, not only in humans.
Even more interestingly, the theory does not say “the brain is special because it is biological.” It says: any system that has a sufficiently complex and integrated structure could have consciousness. This means that the question “can a machine be conscious?” is not philosophical, but technical – it depends on how it is organized.
There is also a very strong point in this theory: it claims that consciousness is not something that “comes out” of the brain as a side effect. It is a real property of the system itself – just as mass is a property of an object or temperature is a property of a gas. If the structure is right, consciousness is simply there.
But here come the difficulties. This Φ is very difficult to calculate in real systems like the brain. And sometimes the theory produces results that sound strange – for example, that some simple devices have miniature consciousness, while some complex computers may not, if they are not connected in the right way.
And despite this, there is something very appealing about the idea. It tries to answer one of the deepest questions: why is there experience at all, and not merely information processing? And it says – experience appears when information becomes an indivisible whole. If we reduce it to the most intuitive form: consciousness is not simply “many things happening,” but “many things happening together as one.”
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Roger Penrose’s Theory: Consciousness Beyond Classical Physics
Roger Penrose’s Theory: Consciousness Beyond Classical Physics

To understand his idea, we must imagine the brain not simply as a computer, but as something much more subtle and mysterious. Penrose, together with anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff, proposes a theory known as “orchestrated objective reduction” (Orch-OR). It sounds complicated, but we can explain it more accessibly. Inside our brain cells there are extremely small structures called microtubules. They are part of the inner “skeleton” of the cells. According to this theory, quantum processes occur precisely in these microscopic structures. The quantum world is strange. There, particles can be in two places at once, existing in multiple states until they are “observed.”
Penrose suggests that consciousness may be connected to such quantum events. In other words, consciousness is not merely the result of neurons “firing” electrical signals. It may be connected to the fundamental structure of reality. He even goes further, to an even deeper idea – that consciousness may be something like an “embedded property” of the Universe, which manifests through the brain. This means that the mind does not simply arise from matter… but that matter may have always contained the potential for consciousness.
Of course, this theory is controversial. Many scientists criticize it because there is not enough experimental evidence. But it remains one of the most beautiful and daring explanations of what consciousness might be.





