Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Consciousness Comes First, Matter Second-Says The Physicist Who Launched The Digital Age


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points:

  • Your consciousness doesn't live in your brain and won't die when your body does-according to the physicist who invented the microprocessor that launched the digital revolution
  • Federico Faggin's quantum theory reverses materialism: consciousness creates reality, space-time is cosmic memory, and living cells are quantum-connected to a unified field
  • The framework warns AI will never achieve understanding while materialist science enables control by convincing populations they're programmable machines

Your consciousness isn't produced by your brain. It exists before your body, uses your body as an instrument, and continues after your body dies.

This isn't mysticism. It's the central claim of Federico Faggin, the physicist who in 1971 invented the Intel 4004-the first microprocessor that launched the entire digital age.

Faggin now argues his life's work in silicon proves the opposite of what Silicon Valley believes.

Computers will never be conscious because consciousness isn't computation. It's the fundamental fabric of reality itself.
The Lake Tahoe Awakening
The conversion came violently. In 1990, vacationing at Lake Tahoe, Faggin experienced his chest erupting with unconditional love so overwhelming that his sense of physical boundaries dissolved.

His awareness existed simultaneously inside and outside his body. The intensity dwarfed anything he'd felt before. The experience lasted minutes. The intellectual earthquake lasted three decades.
A Universe That Knows Itself
What emerged is quantum information panpsychism-a framework positioning consciousness as reality's foundation rather than its accidental byproduct.

Faggin proposes the universe is one unified conscious field with free will, knowing itself by creating countless perspectives.

You aren't a fragment of consciousness trapped in flesh. You're the entire cosmos experiencing itself from a unique viewpoint.


Testable Physics, Not Philosophy
His theory makes testable claims. Living cells operate as quantum-classical hybrids, maintaining connection to a deeper unified field through quantum entanglement-the mysterious phenomenon where particles remain correlated across any distance.

Space-time itself functions as permanent memory storage, expanding to accommodate the universe's accumulating self-knowledge. Dark matter?

Possibly the substrate where cosmic memory is written. When your body fails, the conscious field doesn't die-Faggin compares it to a drone crashing while the pilot walks away unharmed.
Why Machines Will Never Understand
The AI implications are stark. Working with physicist Giacomo Mauro D'Ariano on quantum information foundations, Faggin argues machines manipulate symbols without ever comprehending meaning.

A computer can process the word "love" billions of times per second and never feel anything. True creativity is non-algorithmic-it emerges from consciousness making choices where quantum probability allows free will to operate.

You can copy classical information endlessly. You cannot copy quantum information or conscious experience. That's not philosophy; it's physics.

Even stranger: Faggin predicts trees are conscious despite lacking brains, because consciousness doesn't require neurons-only quantum field connections. Proving this would demolish the "brain-produces-consciousness" orthodoxy.
The Politics of Consciousness
The political stakes run deeper. Faggin warns that materialist science-insisting consciousness is brain-generated illusion-serves power structures by convincing populations they're biological machines.

Once people believe they're programmable matter, technological control by elites becomes almost natural.

His alternative grounds cooperation in ontology: if we're aspects of one unified field experiencing itself, domination contradicts reality's structure.

Competition should only be against your former self, not against others who are literally you from different angles.
What Happens When We Die
Near-death experiences fit the model. Patients clinically dead report seeing operating rooms from ceiling perspectives, encountering deceased relatives, then returning.

Brain-only theories struggle to explain perception without brain function. Field-based consciousness doesn't.

Silicon Valley built empires on Faggin's microprocessor. Now the inventor insists the chip will never match its creator-because consciousness can't be copied, computed, or confined to three pounds of tissue.

It's what the universe is made of, and it was here before your first neuron fired.

Click her and her for interviews with Federico Faggin on this topic.

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The Rio Times

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