AI can solve complex riddles, but does it actually feel anything? Explore how brain structure and biological stakes turn processing into a felt experience.

Consciousness isn't located in one spot—it’s a dynamic state of 'coupling' between local fluctuations in these nuclei and the broad connectivity they have with the rest of the brain.
According to the script, cognitive consciousness refers to the ability to process information and react intelligently to the environment, such as a frog catching a fly or an octopus solving a puzzle. Sentience, or "phenomenal feeling," is the subjective "somethingness" of an experience—the actual feeling of redness or pain. Researcher Nicholas Humphrey suggests that while many animals are intelligent processors, true sentience may have only evolved in warm-blooded animals about 200 million years ago due to faster nerve conduction speeds that allowed for stabilized feedback loops.
While the cerebral cortex was long thought to be the seat of consciousness, recent research highlights the thalamus as a critical coordinator. It acts as a "VIP bouncer" or filter that determines which sensory signals reach the cortex to enter our awareness. Specific higher-order nuclei, such as the pulvinar and mediodorsal nucleus, manage the flow and integration of information; when these connections are disrupted by anesthesia or brain injury, the global network efficiency collapses, and the "integrated song" of consciousness ceases.
This is the core of the "substrate-independence" debate. Functionalists argue that if a silicon chip perfectly replicates the causal patterns and information flow of a neuron, consciousness should remain intact because it is a property of the organization (the "map") rather than the material (the "forest"). However, biological naturalists argue that consciousness might be a biological process—like digestion—that can be simulated but not actually replicated by a computer. Furthermore, current AI architectures are often "feed-forward" and lack the rich, recurrent causal loops found in the human brain, resulting in low levels of integrated information.
Structural invariants are objective physical or algorithmic markers that are consistently present when consciousness occurs. Since we cannot experience another being's "inner light," researchers use a "cluster" of indicators to calculate the probability of consciousness. These include "recurrent processing" (information looping back on itself), a "global workspace" (a central hub that broadcasts data to the rest of the system), and "metacognitive monitoring" (the ability of a system to distinguish its own internal noise from reliable data).
"Thick time" is a concept describing a moment of experience that feels rich, deep, and continuous rather than just a flash of data. It is created by rapid feedback loops in the brain that monitor their own responses to stimuli. Evolutionarily, this "phenomenal surrealism" may have developed to create a sense of "self" or "ownership" over the body. By making life feel significant and personal, consciousness acts as a biological incentive for an organism to try harder to survive and navigate social "societies of selves."
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