Amplifying Phenomenal Information: Toward a Fundamental Theory of Consciousness
arXiv Preprint Archive November 9, 1999
Summary
Consciousness may be woven into the fabric of the universe through information itself, with living beings acting as natural amplifiers. This theory suggests consciousness emerges through two key processes: the trapping of information through self-reinforcing cycles, and maintaining a delicate balance between order and chaos. Like a lens focusing light, our brains amplify and integrate information, creating the rich conscious experience we know as awareness.
Abstract
Fundamental approaches bypass the problem of getting consciousness from non-conscious components by positing that consciousness is a universal primitive. For example, the double aspect theory of information holds that information has a phenomenal aspect. How then do you get from phenomenal information to human consciousness? This paper proposes that an entity is conscious to the extent it amplifies information, first by trapping and integrating it through closure, and second by maintaining dynamics at the edge of chaos through simultaneous processes of divergence and convergence. The origin of life through autocatalytic closure, and the origin of an interconnected worldview through conceptual closure, induced phase transitions in the degree to which information, and thus consciousness, is locally amplified. Divergence and convergence of cognitive information may involve phenomena observed in light e.g. focusing, interference, and resonance. By making information flow inward-biased, closure shields us from external consciousness; thus the paucity of consciousness may be an illusion.