The Awareness-First Theory: A Coherence Principle Underlying Active Inference and Physical Law
Jason Clarke

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new theory that starts with awareness as fundamental and shows how physical laws and perception emerge from it.
Contribution
The Awareness-First Theory introduces a new foundational principle for unifying physical law and conscious experience.
Findings
The Coherence Principle (δA=0) underlies free-energy minimisation and stationary-action physics.
Active Inference maintains coherence within awareness, rather than generating awareness itself.
The theory predicts dissociations between inference and coherence in altered states of consciousness.
Abstract
The Free Energy Principle (FEP) and Active Inference provide a unifying variational framework for modelling perception, action, learning, and self-organisation across biological systems. While highly successful at explaining how systems maintain organisation under uncertainty, these frameworks remain explicitly neutral with respect to a foundational question: why there is experience at all. This paper argues that this limitation reflects not an empirical gap but a misplaced starting point. The Awareness-First Theory (AFT) inverts the usual explanatory order by beginning from the givenness of awareness itself and asking what must be the case for any world to appear coherently. This requirement is formalised as a Coherence Principle, expressed as a variational stationarity condition, δA=0, which specifies the invariance of coherent awareness across changing appearances. I argue that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Complex Systems and Dynamics · Chaos, Complexity, and Education
