Human consciousness may represent a constructed neural interface rather than foundational cognitive architecture. This framework proposes consciousness as an emergent system that develops through subconscious absorption of environmental behavioral patterns and genetic interpretive processing. Preliminary evidence suggests infants demonstrate behavioral competence before developing reflective self awareness, indicating sophisticated unconscious systems preceding conscious interface construction. Neural timing studies consistently show unconscious decision initiation before conscious awareness, though interpretations remain debated. The proposed theory includes three hypotheses: temporal precedence of unconscious processing, environmental construction of conscious identity, and neural interface formation through absorbed behavioral patterns. This theoretical investigation addresses questions about cognitive architecture while acknowledging substantial empirical limitations requiring further research. Testing these predictions would advance understanding of consciousness architecture and unconscious processing mechanisms while informing methodological approaches across multiple psychological domains, regardless of whether the specific theoretical framework receives empirical support.
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Maxwell J Harrell (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e02f46f0e39f13e7fa2f57 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.31235/osf.io/exjbc_v3
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Maxwell J Harrell
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