
Image Credit: Heidi-Ann Fourkiller
Abstract
The prevailing materialistic paradigm in neuroscience posits that consciousness is an emergent property of complex neural computation. This paper proposes an alternative framework: the Consciousness Field Hypothesis. Under this model, consciousness is postulated as a fundamental, non-local element of the universe—analogous to dark matter—that biological life does not generate, but rather interfaces with. By examining basal cognition, specifically the mechanisms of bacterial quorum sensing, we propose that the fundamental architecture for this interface is present at the most rudimentary biological levels. Furthermore, we analyze the distinction between phenomenal consciousness (sentience) and access consciousness (cognition), suggesting that the hypertrophied human neocortex and Default Mode Network (DMN) function as a sensory filter. This filter prioritizes internal analytical modeling at the expense of pure environmental attunement, effectively demonstrating that non-human animals possess a higher fidelity connection to the ubiquitous consciousness field.












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