Contemporary studies of consciousness, biology, and epigenetics often address isolated mechanisms while leaving their systemic coordination underexplored. This fragmentation has contributed to persistent debates about localization, causality, and explanatory sufficiency in conscious experience. The present work proposes an integrative architectural framework that reconceptualizes biological–conscious processing as a distributed, multi-layered, and non-linear system.Rather than introducing a new mechanistic model, the framework organizes existing insights across biological regulation, epigenetic information persistence, and conscious processing into a coherent architectural structure. Within this view, conscious experience emerges as a unified output generated through parallel interactions, bidirectional feedback loops, and resonance-like coordination across multiple biological scales. The framework explicitly rejects linear causality and centralized trigger points, emphasizing instead synchronized system-wide dynamics and compressed experiential outputs.Importantly, the proposed architecture does not claim direct empirical validation of specific mechanisms. Instead, it delineates conceptual possibilities while acknowledging current technological limitations in measuring multi-dimensional biological coordination. Its primary contribution lies in clarifying relationships among previously disconnected domains and in identifying testable directions for future interdisciplinary research.By framing consciousness as an emergent property of architectural organization rather than localized structure, this work offers a unifying perspective that invites empirical refinement, conceptual revision, and dialogue across disciplines.
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Reyhan Karatas (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69cb64d4e6a8c024954b8e79 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19323086
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Reyhan Karatas
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