A logical and topological proof of the irreducibility of consciousness to physical data
Iegor Reznikoff

TL;DR
This paper presents a logical and topological argument demonstrating that visual consciousness forms a space distinct from physical space, making it irreducible to physical laws, with implications for understanding consciousness.
Contribution
It introduces a novel logical and topological proof that visual consciousness cannot be derived from physical data, emphasizing its unique geometric properties.
Findings
Visual space of consciousness differs from physical space
Properties of visual consciousness cannot be deduced from physical laws
Provides a formal logical proof of consciousness irreducibility
Abstract
We show here that what we call visual space of consciousness, the space of what we see, is a specific space different from the purely physical one and that its properties imply that it cannot be reduced to or deduced from physical laws. Some biological points are also briefly considered. The arguments are of logical, mathematical and physical character, and although elementary they require a careful reading. A first shorter version of this paper appeared in a hardly accessible Journal [1], and presented at the International Congress of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Sciences, in Beijing, August 2007. There is no need to define consciousness; we only observe some of its properties, namely geometric and topological properties of visual consciousness, and show that these properties cannot be based on physics only. Now, if a part of consciousness cannot be grounded on physics only, it…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCognitive Science and Education Research
