Conscious Electromagnetic Information Field Theory
Digital Information within neurons is pooled and integrated to form an electromagnetic information field. Consciousness is that component of the brain's electromagnetic information field that is downloaded to motor neurons and is thereby capable of communicating its state to the outside world.
The CEMI Field theory suggests that processing information through the wave-mechanical dynamics of the cemi field provided a significant advantage to our ancestors that was captured by natural selection to endow our minds with the capability to process information through fields. We experience this field-level processing as consciousness. Its defining feature is its ability to handle irreducibly complex concepts such as a face, self, identity, words, meaning, shape, tool, or number, as holistic units. All conscious thinking involves the manipulation of such irreducibly complex concepts and must involve a physical system that can process complex information holistically. The only physical system that can perform this function in the brain is the cemi field. It is through this mechanism that humans acquired the capacity to become conscious agents...
The cemi-field theory proposes that consciousness is the inner experience of information/awareness encoded in the brain's EM field. From the reference frame of the cemi field, conscious actions are its actions - its influence on the world. In this sense, agency is the experience of influence on the world from the frame of reference of information/awareness capable of encoding meaning. Only human brains generate fields with this capacity and are able to communicate these objects and concepts (although artificially generated fields may encode complex information and transmit it to TVs or radios, they lack the dynamics to communicate anything other than the information encoded within their signal - they have nothing else to say). That capacity - human consciousness - may be the key evolutionary advantage captured by the human mind.
- JohnJoe McFadden
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