Kasei-Theory II.Consciousness: Consciousness Without Interiority
Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) June 12, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20651477 via OpenAlex
Summary
The paper argues that consciousness cannot be defined through various traditional concepts such as subjectivity, cognition, or experience. Instead, it proposes that consciousness is a condition of readability related to distributed maintainability, without involving any inner domain or self-awareness. It emphasizes that factors like time, observation, and information do not establish consciousness, which is presented as an external rather than an internal phenomenon.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | Consciousness is defined solely as a local readability condition related to distributed maintainability, rejecting traditional notions of interiority and subjectivity. |
|---|
Abstract
This paper fixes consciousness within the second system of Kasei-Theory. Consciousness is not introduced as interiority, subjectivity, self-awareness, cognition, experience, mental state, inner access, reflection, intentionality, awareness, perception, qualia, life-process, biological substrate, access, or ontology. Reading does not establish consciousness. Time does not establish consciousness. Observation does not establish consciousness. State does not establish consciousness. Field does not establish consciousness. Interaction does not establish consciousness. Information does not establish consciousness. Phase does not establish consciousness. Life does not establish consciousness. Configuration does not establish consciousness. Consciousness is fixed only as the local readability condition under which distributed maintainability is readable as consciousness without interiority. This readability does not establish interiority, subjectivity, self-awareness, cognition, experience, mental state, awareness, intentionality, reflection, qualia, biological substrate, access, or ontology. The paper prevents consciousness from being reduced to inner domain, subjectivity, self-awareness, cognition, lived experience, mental state, awareness, intentionality, reflection, phenomenal consciousness, biological substrate, access, or ontological interiority. Consciousness does not open an inside, does not belong to a subject, does not know itself, does not become cognition, does not ground qualia, and does not secure access. Kasei-Theory does not establish determinism. Fixation is not determination. Constraint is not necessity. Maintainability is not predestination. Non-transition is not modal exclusion. No interiority is presupposed. No subjectivity is introduced. No self-awareness is established. No cognition is restored. No mental state is introduced. No qualia are secured.