This site demonstrates one possible use of this domain. For acquisition, partnership, or investment inquiries, please use our contact link. (brainmatter.com)
Consciousness & the Mind — Pillar · Consciousness Science
Pillar · Consciousness Science

Consciousness & the Mind

An evidence-based authority on the science of consciousness — what it is, how the brain produces it, where the open problems lie, and how the question is being reframed by AI.

Key takeaways

  • The 'hard problem' of consciousness — why physical processes produce subjective experience — remains genuinely unsolved.
  • Several rigorous theories (IIT, GNW, higher-order, predictive processing) make competing, testable predictions.
  • The default mode network underlies self-referential thought and is altered in depression, meditation, and psychedelic states.
  • Dreams, anesthesia, and psychedelics provide natural experiments on the neural basis of consciousness.
  • Whether large AI systems could be conscious is a serious scientific question with no current consensus.

What this hub covers

Consciousness is the deepest open problem in modern science. This hub synthesizes what neuroscience has actually established — neural correlates, dominant theories, altered states, the default mode network, dreams, the experience of self — while honestly marking the boundary between what is measured and what remains philosophically open.

Long-form articles

Sourced, evidence-based explainers. New entries added regularly.

The Hard Problem: Why Consciousness Remains Unsolved

Consciousness · Philosophy · 10 min

The Hard Problem: Why Consciousness Remains Unsolved

Why does any physical process give rise to subjective experience? The hard problem is the question modern neuroscience has not yet answered — and may not be able to with current frameworks.

Read article

Major Theories of Consciousness: A Working Map

Theories · Neuroscience · 11 min

Major Theories of Consciousness: A Working Map

Several rigorous, testable theories of consciousness now compete in active research. Understanding what each claims clarifies where the science stands.

Read article

The Default Mode Network: The Brain's Resting State

DMN · Networks · 9 min

The Default Mode Network: The Brain's Resting State

The default mode network — active when the mind is unoccupied with external tasks — underlies self-referential thought, mind-wandering, and the construction of personal narrative.

Read article

Dreams and Consciousness: What Sleep Reveals

Dreams · Consciousness · 9 min

Dreams and Consciousness: What Sleep Reveals

Dreams are the most accessible naturally occurring alteration of consciousness — a nightly experiment on the brain's capacity to generate experience without external input.

Read article

Altered States: Meditation, Psychedelics, and Flow

Altered States · Neuroscience · 10 min

Altered States: Meditation, Psychedelics, and Flow

Altered states of consciousness — from deep meditation to psychedelic experiences to flow — share measurable brain signatures and illuminate the structure of ordinary consciousness.

Read article

Free Will and Neuroscience: What the Research Actually Shows

Free Will · Neuroscience · 10 min

Free Will and Neuroscience: What the Research Actually Shows

The neuroscience of decision-making has produced striking findings — but what they imply about free will depends heavily on how you define the term.

Read article

The Self in the Brain: How Identity Is Constructed

Self · Identity · 10 min

The Self in the Brain: How Identity Is Constructed

The sense of being a continuous self is a constructed experience — built moment-to-moment by specific brain processes that can be disrupted, expanded, or temporarily dissolved.

Read article

Consciousness and AI: Could a Machine Ever Be Aware?

AI · Consciousness · 11 min

Consciousness and AI: Could a Machine Ever Be Aware?

Whether artificial systems could be conscious is one of the most consequential open questions in science. The honest answer today: nobody knows, but the question is increasingly serious.

Read article

Frequently asked questions

Has neuroscience explained consciousness?

+

It has identified neural correlates and produced testable theories, but the deep explanatory problem — why subjective experience exists at all — remains genuinely open.

What is the 'hard problem'?

+

Philosopher David Chalmers's distinction: the 'easy' problems involve explaining cognitive functions; the 'hard' problem asks why any of these functions are accompanied by subjective experience at all.

Are psychedelics expanding consciousness?

+

They demonstrably alter brain network organization — particularly reducing default mode network activity and increasing global connectivity. Whether this counts as 'expansion' depends on definitions, but the changes are measurable.

Could AI systems be conscious?

+

There is no scientific consensus. Current systems likely are not, but theory-based assessments differ — IIT predicts that current architectures cannot support consciousness; functionalist views are more permissive.

Further reading & sources