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TOA_Transparency — Research Methodology & Verification Overview
Theories of Anything is a 3,627-document multi-disciplinary research knowledge base built through a human–AI partnership (Gortiva and Cairn, a Claude-based model from Anthropic). Every document follows an identical templ
TH_05 — The Water-Carbon-Chirality Triple Lock
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TH_04 — The Suppression Convergence Pattern
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TH_03 — The Fibonacci Inevitability Principle
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66 Cross-Corpus Syntheses
Patterns that only emerge when all 34 sections are connected. 8 thematic clusters tracing threads across ancient knowledge, consciousness, genetics, cosmology, and physics.
Cross-Document Connections
Tracked relationships between specific claims across sections — the threads that make this a web of understanding rather than a collection of isolated facts.
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Synthesis threads under active investigation — held to the same evidence standards but acknowledged as unfinished. These are open questions, not conclusions.
K — Consciousness · 100 documents
K_0_00 — Consciousness & Mind: Section Summary
K_1_00 — Theories Frameworks: Subfolder Summary
K_1_01 — Quantum Consciousness & Penrose-Hameroff
The Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) theory — proposed by Nobel laureate Roger Penrose and anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff — suggests consciousness arises from quantum computations in microtubules within neuro
K_1_02 — Biocentrism and Observer-Dependent Reality
Biocentrism, proposed by Robert Lanza (stem cell biologist) and Bob Berman (astronomer) in 2009, argues that consciousness is FUNDAMENTAL to the universe — not an accidental byproduct of matter — and that the universe's
K_1_03 — Free Energy Principle and Predictive Processing
The Free Energy Principle (FEP), developed by neuroscientist Karl Friston (2006-present), is one of the most ambitious theoretical frameworks in 21st-century science: it attempts to explain the EXISTENCE, BEHAVIOR, and C
K_1_04 — Brain as Filter vs Generator
Two opposing models have dominated the consciousness debate for over a century:
K_1_05 — Global Workspace Theory
Global Workspace Theory (GWT), proposed by Bernard Baars (1988) and neurally formalized by Stanislas Dehaene and Jean-Pierre Changeux as the Global Neuronal Workspace (GNW, 1998–2011), is one of the leading scientific th
K_1_06 — Predictive Processing and Consciousness
Predictive processing (PP) is a unifying framework in cognitive neuroscience proposing that the brain is fundamentally a prediction machine — it continuously generates top-down predictions of incoming sensory input and u
K_1_08 — Higher-Order Theories of Consciousness
Higher-order (HO) theories of consciousness propose that a mental state becomes conscious not by virtue of its intrinsic properties but because it is the target of a higher-order mental representation — a thought, percep
K_1_09 — Philosophical Zombies and the Hard Problem
The philosophical zombie (p-zombie) thought experiment, formalized by David Chalmers (1996), asks: Could there exist a being physically and functionally identical to a conscious human — identical atom for atom, processin
K_1_10 — Panpsychism — Comprehensive Survey
Panpsychism — the view that consciousness or experiential properties are fundamental and ubiquitous features of the physical world — has experienced a dramatic revival in analytic philosophy since the early 2000s, driven
K_1_11 — Dualism: Mind-Body Problem Across Philosophy and Neuroscience
The mind-body problem — the question of how subjective mental experience (consciousness, thought, sensation, emotion) relates to the physical body (brain, nervous system, matter) — is arguably the oldest and most persist
K_1_12 — Orchestrated Objective Reduction: Penrose-Hameroff Theory Deep Dive
Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) is a theory of consciousness proposed by mathematical physicist Sir Roger Penrose (b. 1931, Nobel Prize in Physics 2020) and anesthesiologist Stuart Hameroff (b. 1947), first ar
K_1_13 — Enactivism: Consciousness Through Action and Interaction
Enactivism is a radical approach to cognition and consciousness that rejects the traditional computational model of the mind (the brain as information-processing computer operating on internal representations of the exte
K_1_14 — Qualia: The Subjective Experience Problem
Qualia (singular: quale) — the term used in philosophy of mind for the subjective, experiential properties of conscious mental states — the redness of red, the painfulness of pain, the taste of coffee, the felt quality o
K_1_15 — Consciousness–Genetics Interface
Genetic variation significantly modulates conscious experience, including baseline personality, susceptibility to altered states, response to psychoactive substances, meditation capacity, and vulnerability to disorders o
K_1_17 — Integrated Information Theory: Phi, Axioms & Empirical Tests
Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by Giulio Tononi (University of Wisconsin–Madison) from 2004 to the present, proposes that consciousness is identical to integrated information — a quantity denote
K_2_00 — Neuroscience Brain: Subfolder Summary
K_2_01 — Split-Brain Research and Divided Consciousness
Split-brain research — the study of patients whose corpus callosum has been surgically severed to treat intractable epilepsy — stands as one of neuroscience's most philosophically consequential experimental programs. Rog
K_2_02 — Phantom Limb, Body Schema, and Embodied Consciousness
Phantom limb phenomena — the vivid perception of a limb that has been amputated — provide a unique window into the neural construction of bodily self-awareness and the relationship between consciousness and embodiment. F
K_2_03 — Neural Correlates of Consciousness
The neural correlates of consciousness (NCC) are the minimal neuronal mechanisms jointly sufficient for any one specific conscious experience. The systematic search for NCCs was launched by Francis Crick and Christof Koc
K_2_04 — Attention and Awareness
Attention and awareness are intimately linked yet dissociable aspects of consciousness. Attention — the selective processing of some information at the expense of other information — is a fundamental bottleneck in human
K_2_05 — Unconscious Processing
The cognitive unconscious — mental processes that influence behavior, emotion, and decision-making without reaching conscious awareness — is one of the most empirically robust phenomena in psychology and neuroscience. Fa
K_2_06 — Neurofeedback and Brain Training
Neurofeedback — the real-time display of brain activity (typically EEG) to enable individuals to learn self-regulation of neural dynamics through operant conditioning — has been investigated since the pioneering work of
K_2_07 — Electromagnetic Theories of Consciousness
Electromagnetic (EM) field theories of consciousness propose that conscious experience arises from or is identical to the brain's endogenous electromagnetic field — the complex, time-varying EM field generated by the syn
K_2_08 — The Binding Problem in Consciousness
The binding problem asks how the brain creates unified, coherent conscious experiences from the distributed, specialized processing activity of millions of neurons across separate brain regions. When you see a red ball r
K_2_09 — Neuroscience of Free Will
The neuroscience of free will centers on experiments testing whether conscious intention precedes or follows the neural preparation for action. Benjamin Libet's landmark 1983 experiments showed that the brain's "readines
K_2_10 — Neural Entrainment: External Rhythmic Brain Synchronization
Neural entrainment — the process by which rhythmic external stimuli (sound, light, tactile vibration, or electromagnetic fields) synchronize the timing of neural oscillations in the brain — is a well-established neurophy
K_2_11 — Default Mode Network: Brain at Rest and Self-Referential Consciousness
The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a large-scale brain network that is most active when a person is not focused on the external environment — during mind-wandering, daydreaming, self-referential thought, autobiographical
K_2_12 — Neural Oscillations and Brainwave Consciousness
Neural oscillations — rhythmic fluctuations in the electrical activity of neuronal populations — are among the most prominent features of brain activity, measurable by electroencephalography (EEG) since Hans Berger's fir
K_2_13 — Attention Networks: Dorsal, Ventral, and Salience Systems
Attention — the selective allocation of processing resources to particular stimuli, locations, or tasks — is among the most studied phenomena in cognitive neuroscience and is intimately linked to consciousness: what we a
K_2_14 — Brain Lateralization and Consciousness: The Divided Brain
Hemispheric lateralization — the functional specialization of the two cerebral hemispheres — is one of the most robust findings in neuroscience and has profound implications for understanding consciousness. The left hemi
K_2_15 — Glial Cells and the Tripartite Synapse: The Brain's Other Half
Glial cells (neuroglia) — comprising astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, microglia, and NG2 glia in the central nervous system, plus Schwann cells and satellite cells in the peripheral nervous system — constitute approximately
K_2_16 — Optogenetics: Light-Controlled Neural Circuits
Optogenetics is a biological technique that uses genetically encoded light-sensitive proteins (opsins) to control the activity of specific neurons with millisecond precision using light. Developed primarily by Karl Deiss
K_2_17 — Brain-Computer Interfaces: Neural Engineering, Neuroprosthetics, and the Brain-Machine Frontier
Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) are systems that establish a direct communication pathway between the brain's electrical activity and external devices, bypassing normal neuromuscular channels. The concept was formalized
K_2_18 — Meditation Neurophysiology
Neuroimaging studies of meditation have produced a convergent picture: focused attention practices increase prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex activity, open monitoring practices decrease default mode network (DMN)
K_2_19 — Sleep & Dream Neuroscience — Topology of States
Sleep occupies approximately one-third of human life (~26 years for an average lifespan of 79 years) and constitutes a radically altered state of consciousness whose neurobiological mechanisms, evolutionary function, and
K_2_20 — Savant Syndrome — Neuroscience of Extraordinary Ability
Savant syndrome — the coexistence of extraordinary ability in a specific domain with significant cognitive disability or neurodevelopmental condition — was first described medically by J. Langdon Down (the physician who
K_2_21 — Transcranial Brain Stimulation: tDCS, TMS, and Deep Brain Stimulation
Transcranial brain stimulation encompasses a family of techniques that modulate neural activity by delivering energy — magnetic pulses, electrical current, or implanted electrodes — to specific brain regions. The three p
K_2_22 — Voltage-Gated Ion Channels and Neural Excitability
Voltage-gated ion channels are transmembrane proteins whose conformation depends on membrane potential, opening a selective pore for Na⁺, K⁺, Ca²⁺, or Cl⁻ when voltage thresholds are crossed. They are the molecular engin
K_3_00 — Consciousness Variants: Subfolder Summary
K_3_01 — Machine Consciousness — Can AI Be Aware?
The question of machine consciousness — whether artificial systems can be genuinely aware rather than merely simulating awareness — stands at the intersection of philosophy of mind, neuroscience, and computer science. Jo
K_3_02 — Embodied Cognition
Embodied cognition is a broad research program challenging the classical cognitive science view that the mind is essentially a computer processing abstract symbols in the brain. Instead, embodied cognition holds that thi
K_3_03 — Memory and Consciousness
Memory and consciousness are deeply intertwined — memory provides the continuity of experience that creates a sense of self persisting through time, while consciousness provides the subjective context within which memori
K_3_04 — Anesthesia and Consciousness
General anesthesia — the reversible, drug-induced abolition of consciousness — is one of medicine's greatest achievements and, paradoxically, one of its least understood. Approximately 350 million surgical procedures per
K_3_05 — Extended Mind and Cognitive Extension
The extended mind thesis (EMT), proposed by Andy Clark and David Chalmers in their landmark 1998 paper "The Extended Mind," argues that cognitive processes need not be confined within the skull — external objects, tools,
K_3_06 — Disorders of Consciousness: Coma, Vegetative State, and Minimal Consciousness
Disorders of consciousness (DoC) — coma, vegetative state (now termed unresponsive wakefulness syndrome/UWS), and minimally conscious state (MCS) — represent some of the most challenging clinical and philosophical proble
K_3_07 — Evolution of Consciousness
The question of when, how, and why consciousness evolved is one of the deepest unsolved problems at the intersection of biology, neuroscience, and philosophy. Two major recent proposals have attempted to identify the evo
K_3_08 — Intention, Volition, and Motor Consciousness
The neural basis of voluntary action and the timing of conscious intention relative to brain activity has become one of the most productive — and philosophically consequential — research programs in consciousness studies
K_3_09 — Minimal Consciousness and the Threshold of Sentience
Where does consciousness begin? This question — the problem of the threshold of sentience — is one of the most challenging in consciousness studies because it requires identifying what KIND of physical system is minimall
K_3_10 — Fetal and Infant Consciousness
The question of when consciousness emerges during human development — whether prenatally, at birth, or gradually through infancy — is one of the most consequential in consciousness studies, with direct implications for f
K_3_11 — Animal Consciousness and Sentience
The question of whether non-human animals possess conscious experience — subjective awareness, felt pain, emotions, and self-recognition — has moved from philosophical speculation to a major neuroscientific research prog
K_3_12 — Blindsight and Unconscious Vision: Seeing Without Awareness
Blindsight is a neurological phenomenon in which individuals who are cortically blind — having lost conscious visual experience in part or all of their visual field due to damage to the primary visual cortex (V1/striate
K_3_13 — Coma, Vegetative State, and Minimally Conscious State: Clinical Boundaries
Disorders of consciousness (DoC) — clinical conditions in which awareness (the content of consciousness — perception, thought, experience) and/or arousal (the level of wakefulness — eyes open, sleep-wake cycles) are seve
K_3_14 — Consciousness in Octopuses and Distributed Nervous Systems
Octopuses (Octopus vulgaris, O. bimaculoides, Abdopus aculeatus, and ~300 other species in order Octopoda) represent perhaps the most profound natural experiment in the evolution of consciousness: they are the most cogni
K_3_15 — Anesthesia and the Mechanisms of Consciousness Loss
General anesthesia — the reversible abolition of consciousness through pharmacological agents — is one of the most remarkable phenomena in medicine: it routinely eliminates subjective experience in millions of patients d
K_3_16 — Anesthesia and Consciousness: What Going Under Reveals
General anesthesia provides a unique experimental window into consciousness: the ability to reversibly abolish and restore awareness in a controlled clinical setting. Despite over 175 years of practice since William T.G.
K_3_17 — Psychedelic Consciousness — DMT, Psilocybin Neural Effects
The psychedelic renaissance in neuroscience — a period of renewed scientific investigation beginning circa 2006 after decades of regulatory restriction — has produced an unprecedented body of neuroimaging, pharmacologica
K_3_18 — Bioelectricity and Consciousness Transitions
Conscious experience tracks specific patterns of bioelectric activity in neural tissue, and every clinically validated method of producing unconsciousness — general anesthesia, deep sleep, hypothermic circulatory arrest,
K_3_19 — Electrical Synapses and Gap Junctions in Consciousness
Most neuroscience focuses on chemical synapses, but the brain also uses electrical synapses formed by connexin-36 gap junctions — direct cytoplasmic channels that pass ions and small molecules between neurons. These prov
K_4_00 — Anomalous Esoteric: Subfolder Summary
K_4_01 — Shamanism, Entheogens & Serpent Visions
Shamanism as a cross-cultural altered-state practice is Tier 1 anthropology (Eliade 1964, Winkelman 2010). Clinical psilocybin and DMT research is Tier 1 (Griffiths 2006/2019, Strassman 2001, Davis 2021). The consistent
K_4_03 — Limitation of Consciousness Motif
One of the most startling cross-cultural patterns in the world's mythological and philosophical traditions: ancient civilizations worldwide — separated by thousands of miles, thousands of years, and entirely independent
K_4_06 — Collective Trauma, Cultural Memory, and Intergenerational Transmission
Collective trauma — the psychological impact of catastrophic events on entire communities, nations, or peoples — and its intergenerational transmission across generations is one of the most important intersections of psy
K_4_09 — Consciousness, Virtual Reality, and Simulated Environments
Virtual reality (VR) has become one of the most powerful tools for investigating the construction of conscious experience — particularly body ownership, self-location, embodiment, spatial presence, and the boundaries of
K_4_10 — Telepathy Research
Telepathy — direct mind-to-mind communication — appears in virtually every ancient tradition, from Vedic siddhis and Buddhist abhijñā to Aboriginal Dreamtime and Biblical prophecy. Modern experimental research includes G
K_4_11 — Collective Consciousness & the Collective Unconscious
Collective consciousness — whether framed as Durkheim's sociological construct, Jung's archetypal collective unconscious, or ancient concepts like the Akashic Records and the Noosphere — describes a shared psychic field
K_4_12 — Noosphere — Teilhard de Chardin, Vernadsky, and the Thinking Layer
The noosphere ("sphere of mind") is a concept developed independently by Russian geochemist Vladimir Vernadsky and French paleontologist-priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin in the 1920s, describing a layer of collective hu
K_4_13 — Mirror Neurons and Social Cognition
Mirror neurons are a class of neurons, first discovered in the early 1990s in the premotor cortex (area F5) of macaque monkeys by Giacomo Rizzolatti, Vittorio Gallese, and colleagues at the University of Parma, that fire
K_4_14 — Consciousness and Quantum Biology: Photosynthesis, Navigation, Smell
Quantum biology — the study of quantum mechanical effects playing functional roles in biological processes — has emerged as one of the most exciting interdisciplinary fields of the 21st century, with direct implications
K_4_15 — Shared Death Experiences
Shared death experiences (SDEs) are reported phenomena in which a person who is physically healthy — typically a family member, caregiver, or bystander present at a death — describes experiencing some or all of the featu
K_4_16 — Psi Research Meta-Analysis: Parapsychology, Statistical Evidence, and the Replication Debate
Parapsychology — the scientific study of purported psychic phenomena (psi), including telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition, and psychokinesis — has accumulated over a century of experimental research with a complex and
K_4_17 — Plant and Fungal Consciousness: Intelligence without Neurons
The question of whether plants and fungi possess forms of consciousness, intelligence, or cognition has moved from philosophical speculation to active scientific investigation. Plants exhibit sophisticated information pr
K_4_18 — Near-Death Experiences: Evidence, Neuroscience, and the Consciousness Debate
Near-death experiences (NDEs) are complex subjective experiences reported by approximately 10–20% of cardiac arrest survivors, characterized by feelings of peace, tunnel vision, life review, encounters with deceased pers
K_4_19 — Plant Bioelectricity and Distributed Cognition
Plants generate, propagate, and respond to electrical signals via mechanisms that are biophysically homologous to neuronal action potentials, despite lacking a brain or central nervous system. Action potentials in Mimosa
K_4_20 — Non-Neural Learning: Slime Molds, Plants, Bacterial Adaptation
Learning — modifying behavior based on experience — was long thought to require a nervous system. The last twenty years of basal-cognition research have empirically falsified this assumption. Single-celled slime molds (P
K_4_21 — Quantum Approaches to Consciousness: A Rigorous Assessment
The hypothesis that consciousness depends on quantum-mechanical processes — most prominently in the Penrose-Hameroff Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) model — is one of the most polarizing claims in cognitive sc
K_5_00 — Perception Phenomenology: Subfolder Summary
K_5_01 — Neurophenomenology and First-Person Science
Neurophenomenology — the research program proposed by Francisco Varela (1996) — seeks to bridge the "explanatory gap" between objective neuroscience and subjective experience by integrating rigorous first-person phenomen
K_5_02 — Pain, Consciousness, and the Nature of Suffering
Pain is one of the most philosophically revealing phenomena in consciousness studies: it is simultaneously a sensory detection system, an emotional experience, a cognitive evaluation, and a social communication — and the
K_5_03 — Psychosomatic Medicine and Mind–Body Interaction
Psychosomatic medicine investigates the bidirectional relationship between psychological processes and physical health — how mental states, emotions, beliefs, and social contexts influence bodily disease, and how physica
K_5_04 — Neuroscience of Belief
Belief — the mental state of holding something to be true — is a cornerstone of conscious experience, shaping perception, memory, emotion, decision-making, and behavior. The neuroscience of belief has revealed that belie
K_5_05 — Consciousness and Information Integration: Phi and Its Critics
Integrated Information Theory (IIT), developed primarily by neuroscientist Giulio Tononi (b. 1960) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, with significant contributions from Christof Koch (Allen Institute for Brain Scie
K_5_06 — Dreaming and Consciousness: Why We Dream
Dreaming — the experience of structured hallucinatory consciousness during sleep — is one of the most remarkable features of the human mind and a central challenge for any theory of consciousness. Every night, for a tota
K_5_07 — Psychophysics: Measuring the Relationship Between Mind and World
Psychophysics — literally "the physics of the soul/mind" — is the scientific study of the quantitative relationship between physical stimuli and the sensations and perceptions they produce. Founded by Gustav Theodor Fech
K_5_08 — Metacognition: Thinking About Thinking
Metacognition — literally "cognition about cognition" or "thinking about thinking" — refers to the human capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate one's own cognitive processes. When you realize you don't understand a
K_5_09 — Consciousness and Time Perception: How the Brain Creates Now
Time is perhaps the most intimate dimension of consciousness: every conscious experience occurs in time, and our sense of temporal flow — the feeling that time "passes," that the present moment is real and moving forward
K_5_10 — Theories of Self: No-Self, Minimal Self, Narrative Self
The self — the sense of being a unified, continuous subject of experience — is one of the most fundamental yet puzzling features of consciousness. Who or what is the "I" that sees, thinks, remembers, and acts? Theories o
K_5_11 — Synaesthesia and Consciousness: Cross-Modal Binding
Synaesthesia (British spelling; "synesthesia" in American English) is a neurological condition in which stimulation of one sensory or cognitive pathway automatically triggers an involuntary experience in a second, unstim
K_5_12 — Interoception: Body Signals and Conscious Experience
Interoception — the perception of the internal physiological state of the body — encompasses the sensing and central processing of signals from the heart (cardiac rhythm, blood pressure), lungs (breathing), gut (satiety,
K_5_13 — Integrated World Models: Bayesian Brain and Consciousness
The Bayesian brain hypothesis proposes that the brain is fundamentally a prediction machine — it constructs and maintains internal generative models of the world (including the body), uses these models to generate predic
K_5_14 — Buddhist Abhidharma and the Analysis of Consciousness
The Abhidharma (Sanskrit: "higher teaching," Pali: Abhidhamma) represents Buddhism's systematic attempt to analyze consciousness into its fundamental components — one of the most detailed pre-modern phenomenological fram
K_5_15 — Neural Fractals & the Edge of Chaos: Brain Criticality and Complexity
The brain is poised at a critical point between order and chaos — and its fractality is not an accident but a functional necessity. In 2003, John Beggs and Dietmar Plenz published one of neuroscience's landmark papers: t
K_5_16 — Language, Inner Speech & Consciousness
The relationship between language and consciousness is one of the oldest problems in philosophy of mind and one of the most active frontiers of cognitive neuroscience. The central question — whether conscious thought req
K_5_17 — Neuroplasticity, Cortical Reorganization, and Brain Self-Repair
Neuroplasticity — the brain's ability to reorganize its structure, function, and connections in response to experience, injury, or environmental demand — has transformed neuroscience from a static model ("the adult brain
K_5_18 — Working Memory: Cognitive Architecture and Executive Function
Working memory (WM) is the cognitive system responsible for temporarily holding and manipulating information during complex tasks such as reasoning, language comprehension, and decision-making. Distinguished from passive
K_5_19 — Mantra: Sacred Sound, Repetition, and Consciousness
Mantra — from the Sanskrit man (mind) + tra (instrument/tool) — refers to sacred syllables, words, or phrases repeated as a meditative, devotional, or ritual practice. Originating in the Vedic tradition (c. 1500–500 BCE)
K_5_20 — Psychoneuroimmunology: Mind-Body-Immune Connections
Psychoneuroimmunology (PNI) — the study of interactions between psychological processes, the nervous system, and immune function — has established that the mind directly influences immune defense and that immune activity
K_5_21 — Entoptic Phenomena: Neural Basis of Universal Visual Patterns
Entoptic phenomena are visual experiences generated within the eye or visual nervous system rather than by external stimuli. They include phosphenes (light flashes from pressure on the eye or electrical stimulation), for
K_5_22 — Frequency Following Response (FFR)
The Frequency Following Response (FFR) is a sustained, phase-locked far-field electrophysiological response that tracks the periodicity of acoustic stimuli with sub-millisecond precision, generated primarily in the audit
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