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Our individual lives, happiness, and suffering are not the ultimate point. Instead, our existence is instrumental to a larger process: the mathematical possibility of self-organization leading to intelligent life that coheres into a vast, godlike mind. We are part of the genesis of this universal consciousness.
This theory posits that our lives don't *create* subjective experiences (qualia). Instead, our lives are the emergent result of a fundamental consciousness cycling through a sequence of possible qualia, dictated by probabilistic, Markovian rules.
The core argument of panpsychism is that consciousness is a fundamental property of the universe, not an emergent one that requires complexity. In this view, complex systems like the brain don't generate consciousness from scratch; they simply organize fundamental consciousness in a way that allows for sophisticated behaviors like memory and self-awareness.
The coherence in an organism's development (morphogenesis) and the coherence of a conscious mind might stem from the same root process of self-organization through information exchange. This view scientifically reinterprets ancient concepts like "spirits" as causal, self-organizing software patterns.
Challenging traditional hierarchy, Dr. Levin argues that cognition—problem-solving in various spaces—is a fundamental property of the universe that is wider than life. He suggests the conventional view (intelligent life is a tiny subset of all matter) is backward, and that life is just one way cognition manifests.
Consciousness isn't an emergent property of computation. Instead, physical systems like brains—or potentially AI—act as interfaces. Creating a conscious AI isn't about birthing a new awareness from silicon, but about engineering a system that opens a new "portal" into the fundamental network of conscious agents that already exists outside spacetime.
A purposeful life can be framed as one that actively creates order and value (e.g., knowledge, peace, beauty) in a universe naturally tending towards chaos. Our best "mattering projects" align with this cosmic, counter-entropic struggle, giving life meaning.
Physicists are finding structures beyond spacetime (e.g., amplituhedra) defined by permutations. Hoffman's theory posits these structures are the statistical, long-term behavior of a vast network of conscious agents. Physics and consciousness research are unknowingly meeting in the middle, describing the same underlying reality from opposite directions.
The process of an AI like Stable Diffusion creating a coherent image by finding patterns within a vast possibility space of random noise serves as a powerful analogy. It illustrates how consciousness might render a structured reality by selecting and solidifying possibilities from an infinite field of potential experiences.
Since math describes the structure of consciousness, and Gödel's theorem proves math is infinitely explorable, consciousness itself must be engaged in a never-ending exploration of its own possibilities. This provides a fundamental "why" for existence, replacing biological drives that only exist within our perceptual "headset."
Challenging the binary view of free will, a new mathematical model could show that individual agents (us) and the larger conscious systems they form can both possess genuine free will simultaneously, operating at different but interconnected scales.