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IN SEARCH OF CONSCIOUSNESS (en Inglés)
M.sc. M.eng. Don Hainesworth (Autor) · Gotham Books · Tapa Dura
Quedan más de 100 unidades
$ 1.341The study of consciousness has traversed an extraordinary path-from metaphysical speculation in ancient philosophy to rigorous investigation in the cognitive and neurosciences. Historically, consciousness was the domain of philosophical inquiry, where thinkers such as Plato, Descartes, and Kant attempted to define the nature of subjective experience and its relationship to the material world.
With the advent of modern psychology in the 19th century and the maturation of neuroscience in the 20th and 21st centuries, the focus shifted toward empirical investigation of the brain, behavior, and cognition. Functional neuroimaging, electrophysiology, lesion studies, and computational modeling have revealed a diverse range of brain structures and networks associated with conscious processes, including the prefrontal cortex, thalamus, and the default mode network.
Consciousness research now resides at the intersection of neuroscience, cognitive science, quantum physics, computer science, and philosophy. Theories such as Integrated Information Theory (IIT), Global Workspace Theory (GWT), Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR), and the Free Energy Principle each offer partial models that aim to account for the emergence, architecture, and variability of conscious states. Complemented by findings from psychedelic neuroscience, artificial intelligence, brain simulation, and cross-species studies, the field is undergoing a period of intense interdisciplinary synthesis and discovery.
Hainesworth hypothesizes that human, plant, and animal consciousness could be conceptualized as a highly compressed manifestation of quantum-entangled particles embedded within the fabric of quantum foam. Within this framework, these entangled particles continuously interact and communicate through a dynamic, recursive internal network or feedback loops. This networked entanglement might give rise to the subjective experience of self-awareness (the "inner world") and the capacity to perceive external reality, including other complex quantum-based systems - what we recognize as other conscious living beings.
Thus, consciousness may not be solely the product of classical neuronal computation but instead an expression of deep quantum-level processes embedded within the fundamental structure of reality. Such a view positions consciousness as a universal phenomenon intrinsically tied to quantum mechanics, potentially bridging the gap between the so-called 'physical processes' and phenomenological experience. The so-called 'physical world' in which we find ourselves may be a manifestation of an illusion with an unknown purpose or perhaps a purposeful or unintended artifact/consequence of consciousness.
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