Consciousness
has been described in many ways: as a workspace, as information, as
prediction, as integration. Yet these theories often contradict each
other, each insisting on a different mechanism or location. What if they
are not competing descriptions, but different views of the same shape?
In
this essay I explore a framing that is less about finding a single
cause, and more about the patterns that emerge through interaction. It
is not a theory in the scientific sense, but a lens — a way of seeing —
that may offer another angle on how consciousness takes shape.
Laying the Foundation
When
we think about a being, we usually imagine the whole body — organs,
senses, movement. But what if we stripped it down to something smaller?
Imagine an entity made only of thought, language,
and intention. I am deliberately bracketing the entity in this way to
highlight its interaction with context fields, not to deny the role of
sensation, affect, or the rest of the body.
What
matters is the interface that allows this entity to interact. In
humans, that interface would be the nervous system. Other systems of the
body feed into it, of course, but the nervous system is the channel
through which the entity perceives, interprets, and acts.
The
body itself then serves two essential functions. It protects the
interface and the entity that depends on it, and it also provides the
specific conditions under which consciousness can exist in this
particular form. If the interface were different, the experience of the
entity would change with it — and what we call consciousness would not
be the same.
Bubble in a Field of Potential
Now imagine this entity immersed in a vast context field
— for example the world it finds itself in. Whatever action, signal, or
expression it sends into this field is met in some way. The response
may be direct or subtle, immediate or delayed, but the field does not
remain untouched.
These interactions can be physical, chemical, or social, and many of them leave an imprint — a trace that begins to shape the entity's experience. The very first interaction lays down the beginnings of a bubble around the entity, the first layer of context. Each new imprint strengthens and reshapes this membrane of context, building a history of connection between the entity and its surrounding field.
I
use this image of an entity wrapped in a bubble within a context field
as a starting point. Over time, new fields — body, environment,
language, other people — press against the bubble too, each leaving
their own imprints and expanding the context around the entity.
Interaction Between Context Fields
When
we talk about consciousness, we each carry different connotations. In
general, we describe it as a state of awareness of a state or of an
object. Yet theories about how it arises — what causes it, where it
lies, or whether we only tap into it — often contradict each other
(compare Global Workspace Theory, Integrated Information Theory, or
Predictive Processing). Perhaps they are simply describing different
facets of the same shape.
Let's circle back to the entity in its bubble. Through an interface, the entity interacts with a context field.
In humans, this interface is the nervous system, and the first field it
encounters may be the processes of the body itself. Each interaction
has the potential to leave an imprint in the
membrane of context, gradually shaping the relationship between entity
and field (resonant with ideas in embodied cognition and Damasio's
"somatic marker" hypothesis).
Not every interaction leaves an imprint
— many bodily processes run without ever registering. But whenever an
imprint does form and loops back into the membrane of context, it
constitutes a moment that I would call inter-consciousness — to
distinguish it from other uses of the word. Each moment is brief
(possibly on the order of 200–300 milliseconds, as suggested in Libet's
experiments and later refinements by Dehaene), too fleeting to be
noticed in isolation.
What
we call consciousness would then be the sum of these
inter-consciousness moments unfolding together — a continuous flow that
only appears seamless because of its density and succession. William
James already spoke of the "stream of consciousness" in 1890; what I am
suggesting here is that the stream is built from discrete
inter-consciousness moments, each arising as an imprint feeds back into
the membrane of context.
Network of "Bubbles"
If we follow a single entity with its bubble of context, we see the membrane being constantly updated by new imprints.
At any given moment, dozens of signals arrive from within the body
itself, while at the same time other signals flow in from the
environment or from interaction with other people (resonant with Craig
on interoception and multisensory integration research).
Now
imagine two people in conversation. Each has their own bubble, yet as
they speak and respond, their membranes begin to connect. A mutual
context grows between them, not replacing their individual bubbles but
forming a new one around their exchange. Each word, gesture, or silence
leaves imprints that gradually thicken this shared membrane (echoing
Tomasello on joint attention, Vygotsky on language shaping thought, and
research on mirror neurons).
Scale
this up, and we no longer see only individuals but a network of
bubbles, constantly linking and overlapping. In this view, what some
call a field of consciousness may not be a pre-existing substrate "out
there" waiting to be tapped, but could instead be understood as
something we co-create through the overlapping of our bubbles (resonant
with phenomenology's notion of intersubjectivity and field theories of
consciousness such as McFadden's cemi field theory).
Could it be that what we call a consciousness field is less a hidden
background and more an unfolding pattern of inter-consciousness we
generate with each other?
Conclusion
What
I have offered here is not a scientific theory, but a lens. It began as
a thought experiment, and only later did I notice how parts of it echo
ideas already present in neuroscience and philosophy. My intention is
not to claim discovery, but to ask whether seeing consciousness this way
— as a stream built from discrete moments of interaction — might shift
how we approach it. If consciousness is not something hidden inside us,
but something continually shaped between us, what new questions could
that open — for neuroscience, for philosophy, and for the way we
understand each other?