Continuity and uniqueness of consciousness remain unsolved problems in both neuroscience and philosophy ⁴, ¹². Current frameworks—including GNWT ⁵, ⁶, IIT ¹³, and Orch-OR ⁷—describe correlates of awareness but fail to account for the persistence of a specific self across time or radical change ¹⁴. Through three theoretical thought experiments—brain revival ¹⁹, molecular reassembly, and synthetic replication—this paper examines logical paradoxes hidden within materialist models. If the self depends purely on neural structure or information flow ³, ⁵, identical physical copies would yield indistinguishable consciousnesses, contradicting lived continuity ¹¹, ¹². To resolve this, a hypothesis is proposed: consciousness continuity and uniqueness may require additional biophysical degrees of freedom that operate beyond classical neural dynamics ⁷, ⁸, ¹⁷. These could involve quantum-coherent or system-level informational fields acting as continuity carriers ⁷, ¹⁷. The model yields testable predictions for anesthesia transitions ¹⁰, advanced meditation states ⁹, and quantum-biological assays ⁸. While speculative, the framework integrates neuroscience ⁵, ⁶, physics ⁸, ¹⁷, and contemplative evidence ⁹, ¹⁸ into a unified agenda for empirically exploring the persistence of selfhood.
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Kande Lekamalaya Senarath Dayathilake (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e9b1d9ba7d64b6fc132d4c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.33774/coe-2025-t6pmb-v2
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Kande Lekamalaya Senarath Dayathilake
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