What if consciousness is not an emergent property of the brain? Observational and empirical challenges to materialistic models
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Plain English Summary
What if your mind isn't just your brain doing fancy chemistry? This wide-ranging review rounds up evidence from six areas that challenge the standard "consciousness is produced by the brain" view. Telepathy experiments show people guessing correctly 31% of the time when chance says 25% — across thousands of trials. Even wilder, studies find your body reacts to surprising images seconds before you actually see them, as if you're peeking into the near future. Then there's terminal lucidity, where dementia patients who haven't spoken coherently in years suddenly become completely clear right before death — happening in over 80% of documented cases, which is frankly astonishing. The authors compare brain-based theories of consciousness against alternatives suggesting consciousness might be something fundamental woven into reality itself, not just an accidental byproduct of neurons firing. It's a bold challenge to the mainstream view and a useful roadmap for anyone wondering why psi research keeps turning up statistically significant results that conventional science struggles to explain.
Research Notes
Foundational theoretical review challenging materialist paradigm. Synthesizes evidence from multiple psi domains to argue for non-local consciousness models. Essential for understanding the meta-debate (Controversy #10) about whether psi research is fundamentally sound. Provides theoretical framework connecting consciousness research to psi phenomena. Open access, highly cited reference point for paradigm discussions.
This review examines phenomena that contradict the notion that consciousness is exclusively dependent on brain activity. Six categories are reviewed: (1) remote viewing meta-analyses show significant evidence for perceiving distant locations; (2) ganzfeld telepathy studies (120+ experiments, ~4,000 trials) show 31% hit rate vs 25% chance; (3) presentiment meta-analyses demonstrate physiological responses 1-10s before future stimuli (Mossbridge et al. 2012: d=0.21, p<2.71×10⁻¹²); (4) xenoglossy and acquired savant syndrome cases; (5) non-local experiences reported by 10-97% across populations; (6) terminal lucidity in dementia patients with 80%+ complete remission before death. Non-local consciousness theories (operational probabilistic theory, interface theory, analytic idealism, Orch-OR) are compared to physicalist models (GWT, HOT, IIT, predictive processing). The authors propose consciousness may be fundamental rather than emergent, with non-local properties transcending spacetime constraints.
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📋 Cite this paper
Wahbeh, Helané, Radin, Dean, Cannard, Cedric, Delorme, Arnaud (2022). What if consciousness is not an emergent property of the brain? Observational and empirical challenges to materialistic models. Frontiers in Psychology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.955594
@article{wahbeh_2022_consciousness_not_emergent,
title = {What if consciousness is not an emergent property of the brain? Observational and empirical challenges to materialistic models},
author = {Wahbeh, Helané and Radin, Dean and Cannard, Cedric and Delorme, Arnaud},
year = {2022},
journal = {Frontiers in Psychology},
doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2022.955594},
}