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THE BEADY EYE ASKS WHERE DO OUR THOUGHTS COME FROM?

13 Saturday Jun 2026

Posted by bobdillon33@gmail.com in Thoughts., Uncategorized

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Artificial Intelligence., Consciousness., Digital Citizen?, The Future of Mankind, Visions of the future.

( Twenty minute read)

If we knew it would reshape how we think about meaning, value, and what it is to be alive.

If you ask AI you will get the following answer like below from Gimme, and I quote

“ If you ask a neuroscientist, a psychologist, and a philosopher where thoughts come from, you’ll get three completely different answers. The truth is, thoughts are born at the intersection of biology, environment, and mystery.”

Here we are brushing up against the edge of one of science’s deepest mysteries.

Physics can describe the motion of galaxies, biology can map every gene in your body, and computer science can build machines that beat world champions at games, yet none of this fully explains why there is something it is like to be you.

This gap between physical description and lived experience is what many philosophers and scientists now call the hard problem of consciousness.

It remains the single most baffling question in all of science.

You can, in principle, build a model of perception, attention, or memory in purely physical and computational terms.

You can describe every neuron firing when you stub your toe, but that still does not tell you why there is the sharp, awful feeling of pain, as opposed to just information processing.

This is the question that keeps slipping through the fingers of even the most advanced brain science.

Neuroscientists can map circuits involved in vision, decision-making, and bodily control; they can even predict, to some extent, what you are seeing or thinking based on brain scans.

But unlike most scientific puzzles, consciousness cannot be fully treated as something “out there” to be measured; it is also the very medium through which we do the measuring.

There is no single instrument, no obvious experiment, that everyone agrees would solve the problem once and for all.

Instead, we have a patchwork of theories that often talk past each other and data that can usually be interpreted in multiple ways.

Over the past few decades, several major theories have tried to bridge the gap between brain activity and conscious experience.

Global workspace theories propose that consciousness arises when information is globally broadcast across the brain, making it available to many subsystems at once.

Integrated information approaches focus on how tightly interconnected a system is and suggest that a certain kind of causal structure might inherently give rise to experience.

More biologically flavored ideas point to specific types of cells, brain rhythms, or cortical circuits as key ingredients in producing awareness.

These theories are stimulating and have inspired real experiments, but they often feel like beautifully crafted stories that stop just short of the core mystery.

From the outside, it can look a bit like people trying to explain the magic trick by describing the stage lights instead of the sleight of hand.

If we could perfectly simulate a human brain in a computer, neuron by neuron, would that simulation be conscious in the same way you are?

Some researchers argue that if consciousness depends only on functional organization and information processing, then a sufficiently detailed simulation should, in principle, have its own inner life.

Others push back, wondering whether substrate matters – whether silicon and code, no matter how complex, might still be missing whatever special property biological matter has.

These questions stop being abstract when you imagine, for instance, a future AI claiming to feel fear, joy, or boredom.

Are those just sophisticated outputs with no one actually experiencing them, or is there a genuine subject on the other side?

We barely understand why a brain made of cells is conscious; adding chips and algorithms into the mix forces us to confront how much of our thinking is based on intuition and how little on grounded theory.

Frustration with purely brain-based accounts has led some philosophers and scientists to a more radical possibility: maybe consciousness is not something that emerges from matter, but something woven into the fabric of reality from the start.

Views like this, sometimes grouped under the umbrella of panpsychism, suggest that even very simple physical systems might have tiny, primitive forms of experience, which combine in extraordinarily complex ways in brains like ours.

On this picture, the hard problem softens a bit, because you are no longer trying to pull conscious experience out of a completely unconscious universe.

Still, it raises its own difficult questions: how do these micro-experiences combine into the rich unified consciousness you have right now?

How would you ever test such a claim empirically?

These unanswered questions show that our current scientific framework may simply not be designed to handle subjectivity as a basic ingredient of reality, and extending that framework without drifting into pure speculation is a delicate balancing act.

One of the most stubborn obstacles in consciousness science is that the thing we care about most – how it feels from the inside – is only directly available to the person having the experience.

Like pain. Only the person experiencing the pain knows what it is like. It cannot be appreciated by others. This why in hospitals they ask you to describe the pain on a scale of 0 to 10 .

Everyone else has to rely on reports, behaviors, and brain measurements as indirect clues.

We can put people in scanners, ask them what they see or feel, and try to correlate that with neural patterns, and this has led to impressive findings about what the brain is doing when we are aware versus unaware.

But the core subjective quality remains stubbornly first-person, resisting full translation into numbers and graphs.

For science, which thrives on public, shareable data, that loss is not just frustrating; it might be a structural limitation.

Some researchers think we will eventually build better tools and frameworks to deal with this, perhaps by combining brain data with more refined methods of introspection or new mathematical models of experience.

Others suspect that consciousness will always sit slightly sideways to our standard ways of knowing, forcing us to rethink what we expect from a scientific explanation in the first place.

How we understand consciousness shapes how we treat animals, patients in comas or vegetative states, and, increasingly, AI systems.

If you believe experience requires a human-style cortex, you may draw a very different ethical line than if you think some degree of feeling might be present in other creatures or even in artificial networks.

These questions show up in policy debates, hospital ethics boards, and tech company research labs more often than you might think.

It underlines the sheer strangeness and fragility of being a conscious creature, moving through the world with this fragile bubble of inner experience that no one else can fully access.

At this point, I am convinced that the hard problem of consciousness is not just a puzzle we have not solved yet, but a spotlight revealing the edges of our current way of doing science.

Our methods are astonishingly good at mapping structures, functions, and behaviors, but they were never built to handle the raw feel of experience as something to be explained in its own right.

That does not mean we should give up, but it does mean we may need to stretch, or even partially reinvent, our concepts of explanation, evidence, and theory if we hope to make real progress.

Clinging too tightly to familiar frameworks risks turning consciousness science into a game of clever redefinitions rather than genuine understanding.

One day, maybe, we will look back and see that the way we currently talk about mind and matter was as limited as pre-relativity physics.

Until then, the fact that anything feels like anything at all remains a quiet, daily astonishment – one that turns every ordinary moment into a tiny philosophical earthquake.

When you next notice a simple feeling, even something as small as the warmth of a mug in your hands, will you see it the same way?

I believe that proving that a child’s socioenvironmental reality leaves a deeper structural and functional signature on the developing brain than any other biological, behavioral, or psychological factor.

I also believe that consciousness is the subjective, internal experience of the world—the redness of a strawberry, the specific sting of pain, or the feeling of being happy.

Without consciousness there would be no point in living if you could not perceive sensations, feel emotions, and experience pain or pleasure never mind having the capacity to think about one’s own thoughts (metacognition), plan for the distant future, and possess a distinct sense of self.

By the way just in case you might think we are the only ones with a consciousness you would be wrong.

We are not unique in possessing the neurological mechanisms that generate consciousness. Non-human animals—including all mammals, birds, and many other creatures—possess these same nervous system pathways.

There is a strong scientific probability of conscious experience in reptiles, amphibians, fish, and even insects and cephalopods (like octopuses).

Human consciousness might include a hyper-developed layer of language, narrative memory, and abstract thinking, but the fundamental “light inside the house”—the capacity to subjectively feel, experience, and react to life—is a deeply shared biological trait across the animal kingdom.

All human comments appreciate. All like clicks and abuse chucked in the bin.

Contact. bobdilllon33”gmail.com

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