The Consciousness Tetris: A Theory of Emergent Resonant Identity
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This paper presents a novel theory of consciousness as an emergent spatiotemporal structure arising from evolutionary complexity, structural resonance, and recursive self-organization. Using the metaphor of Tetris, the theory models consciousness as a continuous process of scene construction, integration, and collapse. Qualia are framed as experiential resonances—structured waveforms generated by the alignment of neural ‘blocks’ within the dynamic architecture of cognition. The theory proposes that all mutations (genetic, experiential, or neural) serve as necessary perturbations enabling emergent complexity. It draws on convergent evolution, neuroscience, and systems theory, offering falsifiable predictions, measurable variables, and a detailed experimental framework. Sections cover inherited structures, trauma, psychedelics, scene transitions, REM sleep, and dream integration. A dedicated rebuttal section addresses objections from neuroscience, reductionism, and philosophy of mind. The theory concludes that consciousness is not a binary phenomenon but an evolving field of self-knowing complexity.(Carhart-Harris et al., 2014; McGhee, 2011; Churchland, 1986)