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The Frontier

An ongoing investigation into the deepest questions of mind, consciousness, healing and systems. Each week the research engine cross-references the latest work across fields and languages — and shows its work: the sources, a confidence rating, and what would change its mind.

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Week 2 · Mind & Consciousness · 1 July 2026

What is consciousness?

We can now measure and manipulate conscious states reliably — and still cannot explain why experience exists at all. The four live theories, a German line most English summaries skip, and why a famous 25-year bet was just conceded. Includes a ≈30–45-minute CPD unit.

the hard problemIIT vs GNWTCPD-eligible
Read the full investigation

Last week we asked how the brain builds the world. This week the harder question: why is any of that building experienced at all? Consciousness is the one fact you are most certain of and the one science can least explain — and the gap between what we can now measure and what we can explain is the whole story.

Overall confidence in a single settled answer low (2/5) — we can now measure and manipulate conscious states reliably; we cannot yet explain why experience exists, and no theory has won
Output 1 · Research synthesis

What the evidence currently says

Start with the distinction that organises the entire field. David Chalmers (1995) separated the "easy" problems of consciousness — how the brain discriminates, integrates, reports, attends — from the "hard" problem: why any of this information-processing is accompanied by subjective experience at all. The easy problems are tractable in principle by ordinary science. The hard problem asks why there is "something it is like" to be you. Thirty years on, that split still frames the debate, because progress on the first has not dissolved the second.

hard problemphenomenal consciousnessneural correlatesqualia

Where the science has moved is on two fronts: measuring consciousness, and testing competing theories against each other rather than merely elaborating them.

Strong / convergent — we can now measure conscious state
  • The Perturbational Complexity Index (PCI). Massimini and colleagues "zap" the cortex with a magnetic pulse (TMS) and "zip" the echoing EEG response with a compression algorithm. Rich, differentiated echoes score high; simple, stereotyped ones score low. A threshold around PCI ≈ 0.31–0.44 cleanly separates wakefulness and dreaming from dreamless sleep, anaesthesia and coma — and has detected covert consciousness in behaviourally unresponsive brain-injury patients before they recover the ability to respond.
  • Content can be decoded. Using fMRI, MEG and intracranial electrodes, what a person is consciously seeing can be read out from cortical activity — locating where conscious content lives, even when we still can't say why it is felt.
What recently moved the field — theories put to genuine test. The Cogitate consortium ran a seven-year, preregistered adversarial collaboration pitting Integrated Information Theory (IIT) against Global Neuronal Workspace Theory (GNWT), with both camps' proponents agreeing the tests in advance. Reported in Nature (30 April 2025; n = 256), it found conscious content is best decoded from posterior cortex, and that prefrontal cortex and "global broadcast" were not necessary — pressure on GNWT, partial support for IIT's posterior "hot zone." But a key IIT prediction also failed, so neither theory was confirmed. The durable result is methodological: theories of consciousness can now be made to genuinely risk being wrong.
The bet that says it all. In 1998 neuroscientist Christof Koch bet philosopher David Chalmers a case of wine that a clear neural signature of consciousness would be found within 25 years. In June 2023, on stage in New York, Koch conceded and handed Chalmers the wine. No clean, agreed correlate had been found. The most honest one-line status of the field is written in that handover.
Going deeper · The four live theories

The competing maps, and what each actually claims

"Consciousness" is not one debate but several stacked on top of each other. It helps to hold four leading families of theory in view — because they are not all answering the same question.

1 · Integrated Information Theory (IIT) — consciousness is integration

Giulio Tononi's IIT starts from experience itself and asks what a physical system must be like to have it. Its answer: consciousness is integrated information (Φ) — information a system holds as a unified whole, over and above its parts. High Φ, rich experience; zero Φ, none. It is unusual in being explicitly mathematical. PCI is its most successful practical spin-off, and its posterior-cortex emphasis drew partial support in 2025.

2 · Global Neuronal Workspace (GNWT) — consciousness is broadcast

Stanislas Dehaene and Bernard Baars propose that content becomes conscious when it is "broadcast" across a fronto-parietal network, made globally available to memory, language, decision and report. The signature is "ignition" — a late, widespread surge. GNWT explains reportability well, but its reliance on prefrontal cortex took a hit in the 2025 tests.

3 · Higher-Order & Attention-Schema theories — consciousness is a model of the mind

These say a state is conscious when the brain represents itself as being in that state. Michael Graziano's Attention Schema Theory is the cleanest version: the brain builds an "attention schema" — a rough internal model of its own attention — and subjective awareness is what that self-model feels like from the inside. Deliberately deflationary and engineerable.

4 · Illusionism — the hard problem is the mistake

Keith Frankish and (the late) Daniel Dennett argue that phenomenal consciousness as usually described — private, ineffable, intrinsic "qualia" — does not exist. What exists is a brain that represents itself as having such properties. The real task becomes the "meta-problem": explain why we are so convinced we have qualia. Critics call this changing the subject; defenders call it dissolving a pseudo-problem.

Note the structure: IIT and GNWT are theories of which physical states are conscious; higher-order and attention-schema theories are theories of what makes a state conscious; illusionism is a theory about why the question feels so hard. Much apparent disagreement is really people answering different questions with the same word.

Underseen · Foreign-language research

The German line most English summaries skip: there is no "self" to be conscious

English-language debate fixates on experience. A major German-language programme reframes the prior question — the experiencer. Philosopher Thomas Metzinger (Mainz), in Being No One and the Selbstmodell-Theorie der Subjektivität, argues: "Es gibt kein Selbst" — there is no self. What exists is a "transparentes Selbstmodell" — a self-model so seamless the system cannot experience it as a model, and so mistakes the map for a resident.

His image is the "Ego Tunnel": the brain builds a low-dimensional model of the world and places a model of the organism inside it; we live inside that tunnel, unable to see its walls. The underseen move is ethical: once we understand experience as a manufactured state-space, we acquire responsibility for which states we cultivate — a "Bewusstseinskultur," a culture of consciousness. That normative turn is largely absent from the anglophone correlates-hunting literature, and it is directly relevant to any practitioner working with attention and states of mind.

Translations are the engine's own, rendered for sense; consult Metzinger's originals for exact wording.

Output 2 · Insight generation

What follows if this is the real state of play

  • "Level" and "content" have come apart from "why." We can measure how conscious a system is (PCI) and decode what it is conscious of — while remaining unable to explain why there is experience at all. Progress and mystery are coexisting, not competing.
  • Consciousness may be a quantity before it is a thing. The field's most successful tool (PCI) measures a graded property — differentiated integration — not a yes/no switch. This favours a view where consciousness comes in degrees across sleep, anaesthesia, brain injury, infancy and animals.
  • The "self" is a leverage point. If the self is a transparent model, practices that make the model opaque — meditation, certain psychedelic states, therapeutic reframing — are the system briefly seeing its own modelling. This reframes "insight" as a change in the transparency of a model.

These are interpretive implications drawn from the evidence, not themselves established experimental findings — flagged as such.

Show the work · Contradictions & competing theories

Where it's contested — and it is, fiercely

Is IIT even science? In September 2023, 124 researchers signed an open letter branding IIT "pseudoscience" — arguing it is unfalsifiable in practice. Others (including Anil Seth, no IIT partisan) called the label "inflammatory." The field cannot yet agree on what would count as testing its leading mathematical theory.
The hard problem may be unsolvable — or unreal. Mysterians say human cognition can't crack it. Illusionists say there's nothing there to crack. Realists say we lack the concepts but will get them. No experiment currently distinguishes these positions.
Correlation is not explanation. Even a perfect neural correlate would tell us when experience occurs, not why physical processing is accompanied by experience. This is why Koch lost the bet: measurement has outrun understanding.
Panpsychism is back on the table — uncomfortably. A serious minority treat experience as a fundamental feature of matter. It avoids the emergence problem but inherits the "combination problem": how do micro-experiences add up to a unified mind? No consensus, but no longer fringe.
Through the RFT lens

The same shape, in the project's own terms

Look at this through my own framework, Recursive Field Theory (RFT). RFT doesn't treat the self as a thing tucked inside the brain. It treats it as a state a system falls into — the moment when everything holding you together (your body, your information, your sense of meaning) lines up and stays lined up long enough to hold. On this view the self isn't inside the system; it's the state the system enters when it becomes coherent. That fits the strongest fact in the science: the best measure of consciousness (PCI) rewards exactly this — a system connected enough to hold together, yet varied enough not to go blank. The hardest cases line up too: anaesthesia, dissociation, deep meditation and split-brain all look like the same system settling into different balances of connection and memory. And it meets Metzinger from the other side — the self as a model folded into the system, not a resident behind it.

This is my own framework (RFT), offered as a way of seeing — not established neuroscience, and not a claim to have solved the hard problem. It describes the structure of selfhood, not why any of it is experienced — part of why this piece's confidence stays low.

From the author

A note on the framework — and why this convergence matters

This investigation sits alongside my own ongoing work, Recursive Field Theory (RFT) — an original framework I have been developing that models mind and selfhood as a recursive field that stabilises when it closes on itself. One honest note: I had not encountered Thomas Metzinger's self-model work before the engine surfaced it — and yet RFT independently arrives at a structurally similar picture: the self as a model folded into the field, not a resident sitting behind it. That convergence, reached from a different direction, is part of why I believe the structural view is worth pursuing. The Frontier is where I investigate the questions underneath RFT in the open — and where that framework continues to develop.

— David Fleming. RFT is my original work, offered here as an interpretive lens and an active line of research, not as settled science.

Output 3 · Recursive investigation

What to investigate next

Sources

  1. Chalmers, D. — "Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness." Journal of Consciousness Studies (1995). philpapers.org/rec/CHAFUT
  2. Cogitate Consortium — "Adversarial testing of GNWT and IIT." Nature 642, 133–142 (30 Apr 2025). nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08888-1
  3. "A 25-Year-Old Bet about Consciousness Has Finally Been Settled." Scientific American (2023). scientificamerican.com
  4. Casarotto, S., Massimini, M. et al. — Perturbational Complexity Index (PCI). overview.
  5. "Consciousness theory slammed as 'pseudoscience'." Nature news (2023) — the 124-signatory IIT open letter. nature.com/articles/d41586-023-02971-1
  6. Graziano, M. — "The Attention Schema Theory." PMC4407481. pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
  7. Frankish, K. — "Illusionism as a Theory of Consciousness." keithfrankish.com
  8. Metzinger, T. — Being No One (MIT Press, 2003); The Ego Tunnel (2009).
  9. "The New York Declaration on Animal Consciousness" (19 Apr 2024). nydeclaration

Primary sources and reputable overviews linked where available. Always consult the originals — this synthesis describes emphasis and findings, not verbatim claims.

Structured learning · CPD-eligible

Make this count as CPD (≈30–45 min)

Learning outcomes. After this investigation you should be able to: (1) distinguish the "easy" problems from the "hard" problem, and say why measurement progress does not close the explanatory gap; (2) summarise the four leading theory families and what question each answers; (3) explain what the PCI "consciousness meter" measures and its clinical use; (4) articulate why the 2023 Koch–Chalmers bet and the 2025 Cogitate results describe a field that can measure consciousness without yet explaining it.

To complete the unit:

  • Read the associated references. Read at least Chalmers (1995) and one empirical source — the Cogitate Nature (2025) paper or the PCI overview — linked in Sources above.
  • Reflect (write 3–5 lines each): Where in my practice do I treat "consciousness" as all-or-nothing rather than graded? If the self is a transparent model, how does that change how I think about insight and identity work? Which theory's framing most matches how I already think — and what would make me revise it?
  • Log it against your professional body's CPD requirements.

Self-certified, CPD-eligible structured learning — not statutory-regulator endorsement; practitioners self-assess relevance and log accordingly. Log only genuine time spent. Certificate available to members.

Our standards. Every investigation is built to be tested, not believed: claims are sourced, strong evidence is kept separate from contested evidence, competing theories and contradictions are shown rather than smoothed over, confidence is stated explicitly, and each piece names what would change its mind — and a human reviews every word before it is published. Reality is the arbiter.

Week 1 · Mind & Consciousness · 26 June 2026

How does the brain construct reality?

Two theories — active inference and Hoffman's interface theory — agree perception isn't a readout of the world, and disagree sharply on what that means. Includes a ≈45-minute CPD unit.

predictive processinginterface theoryCPD-eligible
Read the full investigation

If what you experience is built by the brain rather than received from the world, then perception, meaning and orientation are all models — and models can be examined, tested and refined. This is the question beneath the entire project.

Overall confidence in the core claim high (4/5) — strong convergent evidence; mechanism and consciousness link still contested
Output 1 · Research synthesis

What the evidence currently says

Across neuroscience, cognitive science and philosophy of mind, a dominant framework has formed: the brain is fundamentally a prediction machine. Rather than building experience bottom-up from raw sensory input, it runs a generative model — its best guess about the causes of its sensory stream — and uses incoming signals mainly to correct prediction errors. Perception, on this view, is a "controlled hallucination" reined in by the world (Seth; Clark; Hohwy). Karl Friston's Free Energy Principle formalises it: organisms persist by minimising prediction error (free energy), either by updating the model (perception) or by acting to make the world fit the model (active inference).

predictive processingactive inferencefree energy principlegenerative model
Strong / convergent
  • Predictive-coding architectures fit a wide range of perceptual phenomena (illusions, attention as precision-weighting, binocular rivalry) and map onto cortical hierarchy and feedback connectivity.
  • The framework is unusually unifying — it reframes perception, action, attention, emotion and aspects of mental health under one principle (prediction-error minimisation).
What recently moved the field. A seven-year, preregistered adversarial collaboration (the Cogitate consortium) pitting Integrated Information Theory (IIT) against Global Neuronal Workspace Theory (GNWT) reported in Nature, 30 April 2025 (n = 256; fMRI, MEG, iEEG). Conscious content decoded best from posterior cortex; prefrontal cortex and "global broadcast" were not necessary — a result that pressures workspace-style accounts and partially favours posterior "hot-zone" views. Crucially, neither theory was confirmed — the headline is methodological: theories of mind can be put to genuine, falsifiable test.
Going deeper · Two theories, one conclusion

Why perception need not show you the truth

Two independent research programmes — one from neuroscience, one from evolutionary game theory — arrive at the same unsettling place: what you perceive is not a faithful readout of the world. They agree on that, and disagree sharply on what it means. That disagreement is where the frontier is.

1 · Active inference — perception as the brain's best guess

Active inference, developed by Karl Friston, treats the brain as a prediction machine running a generative model of the world. It does not assemble experience from raw sensory data flowing inward; instead it continuously generates its best inference about the hidden causes of its sensations, and uses the senses mainly to correct that model where it errs. Formally, the system acts to minimise prediction error — "variational free energy," a measure of the gap between what it expects and what it senses. Crucially, it can close that gap two ways: by updating the model (this is perception) or by acting on the world to make the sensations match the prediction (this is action). Perceiving and acting become two faces of the same loop. So what you experience is a controlled construction, tuned to support useful inference and action — not to mirror reality faithfully.

2 · Interface theory — evolution doesn't select for truth

Donald Hoffman pushes the point further, and from a different direction. With Chetan Prakash he proved what they call the Fitness-Beats-Truth (FBT) theorem: in evolutionary game-theoretic models, organisms whose perceptions are tuned to fitness reliably outcompete and drive to extinction those tuned to perceive objective reality as it is. In their simulations the probability that a truth-perceiving strategy survives natural selection rounds, strikingly, to roughly zero. Hoffman's conclusion — his Interface Theory of Perception — is that our senses evolved like a desktop interface: the icons are useful precisely because they hide the underlying machinery rather than reveal it. On this view space, time and physical objects are species-specific data structures, not the furniture of reality.

Read this precisely: the "≈0%" is a result within a formal evolutionary model under stated assumptions, not an unconditional empirical fact. Its strength is the theorem; its limit is the modelling assumptions — which is exactly what a careful reader should interrogate.

The tension worth holding

Both theories agree perception is non-veridical — built for usefulness, not truth. But they part on the metaphysics. Friston's active inference is broadly naturalist and physicalist: the brain is a physical organ modelling a physical world it cannot see perfectly. Hoffman runs the same non-veridicality against physicalism, arguing for "conscious realism" — that consciousness, not matter, is fundamental. Same premise, opposite conclusions. Resisting the urge to collapse that into one tidy story — and instead asking which assumptions drive the divergence — is the actual frontier work here.

Output 2 · Insight generation

What follows if this is true

The interesting move is not to summarise the science but to ask what it implies:

  • Experience is editable at the level of the model, not the world. If perception is the brain's best guess, then changing what you attend to, expect and believe changes what you literally perceive — the mechanism behind reframing, placebo, and why orientation precedes clarity.
  • Suffering is often a prediction-error problem, not only an event problem. Much distress is the gap between a strong prior (how things "should" be) and life evidence. This reframes "healing" as model-revision rather than mood-management.
  • Action and perception are one loop. Active inference says we don't just perceive then act — we act to confirm our models. Identity becomes self-fulfilling unless the loop is made visible.

These are interpretive implications drawn from the framework, not established experimental findings — flagged as such.

Show the work · Contradictions & competing theories

Where it's contested

Is the Free Energy Principle falsifiable? Critics argue it is so general it risks explaining everything and predicting nothing specific — a framework, not yet a strictly testable theory. Defenders reply that its process theories (predictive coding, active inference) do make testable predictions. Unresolved.
Prediction ≠ consciousness. Predictive processing explains a lot about perception but does not by itself say why any of it is experienced. The 2025 adversarial result favoured posterior (IIT-leaning) accounts over workspace accounts — but confirmed neither, and sits largely apart from the predictive-processing framework. The "hard problem" remains open.
Competing maps. IIT (consciousness = integrated information, posterior), GNWT (consciousness = global broadcast, prefrontal), higher-order theories, and predictive-processing accounts are not yet reconciled. We have strong models of construction, weak consensus on experience.
Through the RFT lens

The same shape, in the project's own terms

Look at the same picture through my own framework, Recursive Field Theory (RFT). RFT sees the mind as a system always trying to "close the loop" — to settle into a stable, coherent read of the world. Your existing beliefs are the memory it starts from; surprise is what unsettles it; and you resolve that surprise the same two ways active inference describes — by updating your picture, or by acting to change the world. When the loop settles, you feel oriented and clear; when it can't, you feel fragmented. That's why better models of reality genuinely bring more clarity and agency — it's the same settling process, seen from the inside.

Recursive Field Theory is my own framework, offered as a way of seeing — not established neuroscience. It describes the structure of the process, not why it feels like anything.

Output 3 · Recursive investigation

What to investigate next

Sources

  1. Cogitate Consortium — "Adversarial testing of global neuronal workspace and integrated information theories of consciousness." Nature, 30 Apr 2025. nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08888-1
  2. Friston, K. — "The free-energy principle: a unified brain theory?" Nature Reviews Neuroscience (2010). nature.com/articles/nrn2787
  3. Parr, T., Pezzulo, G. & Friston, K. — Active Inference: The Free Energy Principle in Mind, Brain, and Behavior (MIT Press, 2022).
  4. Clark, A. — "Whatever next? Predictive brains, situated agents, and the future of cognitive science." Behavioral and Brain Sciences (2013).
  5. Seth, A. — Being You: A New Science of Consciousness (2021).
  6. Hohwy, J. — The Predictive Mind (2013).
  7. Hoffman, Singh & Prakash — "The Interface Theory of Perception." Psychonomic Bulletin & Review (2015). link.springer.com
  8. Prakash, C. et al. — "Fitness Beats Truth in the evolution of perception." Acta Biotheoretica (2021). link.springer.com
  9. Hoffman, D. — The Case Against Reality (2019).

Primary sources linked where available; books cited by title. Always consult the originals — this synthesis describes emphasis and findings, not verbatim claims.

Structured learning · CPD-eligible

Make this count as CPD (≈45 min)

Learning outcomes. After this investigation you should be able to: (1) explain the predictive-processing / active-inference account of perception; (2) state the Fitness-Beats-Truth result and its modelling caveats; (3) articulate why active inference and interface theory agree perception is non-veridical yet diverge metaphysically.

To complete the unit (this is what makes it ~45 minutes of reflective learning):

  • Read the associated references. Read at least Friston (2010) and the Hoffman, Singh & Prakash (2015) interface-theory paper in full — linked in Sources above.
  • Reflect (write 3–5 lines each): Where might my own practice assume clients perceive their situation "as it is"? Which of the FBT modelling assumptions would I most want to challenge? What is one prediction-error reading of a pattern I see in my work?
  • Log it. Record the time spent and these reflections against your professional body's CPD requirements.

Self-certified, CPD-eligible structured learning — not an endorsement by any statutory regulator. Hours shown reflect estimated reflective-learning time; log only genuine time spent. Certificate available to members.

Our standards. Every investigation is built to be tested, not believed: claims are sourced, strong evidence is kept separate from contested evidence, competing theories and contradictions are shown rather than smoothed over, confidence is stated explicitly, and each piece names what would change its mind — and a human reviews every word before it is published. Reality is the arbiter.

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The Frontier · Models of Reality

© 2026 David Fleming · Models of Reality / The Frontier. All rights reserved. Recursive Field Theory (RFT) is the original work of David Fleming. No part of this publication or the system that produces it may be reproduced, reverse-engineered or used to train or build a competing service without permission.