Please take a look at Articles on self-defense/conflict/violence for introductions to the references found in the bibliography page.

Please take a look at my bibliography if you do not see a proper reference to a post.

Please take a look at my Notable Quotes

Hey, Attention on Deck!

Hey, NOTHING here is PERSONAL, get over it - Teach Me and I will Learn!


When you begin to feel like you are a tough guy, a warrior, a master of the martial arts or that you have lived a tough life, just take a moment and get some perspective with the following:


I've stopped knives that were coming to disembowel me

I've clawed for my gun while bullets ripped past me

I've dodged as someone tried to put an ax in my skull

I've fought screaming steel and left rubber on the road to avoid death

I've clawed broken glass out of my body after their opening attack failed

I've spit blood and body parts and broke strangle holds before gouging eyes

I've charged into fires, fought through blizzards and run from tornados

I've survived being hunted by gangs, killers and contract killers

The streets were my home, I hunted in the night and was hunted in turn


Please don't brag to me that you're a survivor because someone hit you. And don't tell me how 'tough' you are because of your training. As much as I've been through I know people who have survived much, much worse. - Marc MacYoung

WARNING, CAVEAT AND NOTE

The postings on this blog are my interpretation of readings, studies and experiences therefore errors and omissions are mine and mine alone. The content surrounding the extracts of books, see bibliography on this blog site, are also mine and mine alone therefore errors and omissions are also mine and mine alone and therefore why I highly recommended one read, study, research and fact find the material for clarity. My effort here is self-clarity toward a fuller understanding of the subject matter. See the bibliography for information on the books. Please make note that this article/post is my personal analysis of the subject and the information used was chosen or picked by me. It is not an analysis piece because it lacks complete and comprehensive research, it was not adequately and completely investigated and it is not balanced, i.e., it is my personal view without the views of others including subject experts, etc. Look at this as “Infotainment rather then expert research.” This is an opinion/editorial article/post meant to persuade the reader to think, decide and accept or reject my premise. It is an attempt to cause change or reinforce attitudes, beliefs and values as they apply to martial arts and/or self-defense. It is merely a commentary on the subject in the particular article presented.


Note: I will endevor to provide a bibliography and italicize any direct quotes from the materials I use for this blog. If there are mistakes, errors, and/or omissions, I take full responsibility for them as they are mine and mine alone. If you find any mistakes, errors, and/or omissions please comment and let me know along with the correct information and/or sources.



“What you are reading right now is a blog. It’s written and posted by me, because I want to. I get no financial remuneration for writing it. I don’t have to meet anyone’s criteria in order to post it. Not only I don’t have an employer or publisher, but I’m not even constrained by having to please an audience. If people won’t like it, they won’t read it, but I won’t lose anything by it. Provided I don’t break any laws (libel, incitement to violence, etc.), I can post whatever I want. This means that I can write openly and honestly, however controversial my opinions may be. It also means that I could write total bullshit; there is no quality control. I could be biased. I could be insane. I could be trolling. … not all sources are equivalent, and all sources have their pros and cons. These needs to be taken into account when evaluating information, and all information should be evaluated. - God’s Bastard, Sourcing Sources (this applies to this and other blogs by me as well; if you follow the idea's, advice or information you are on your own, don't come crying to me, it is all on you do do the work to make sure it works for you!)



“You should prepare yourself to dedicate at least five or six years to your training and practice to understand the philosophy and physiokinetics of martial arts and karate so that you can understand the true spirit of everything and dedicate your mind, body and spirit to the discipline of the art.” - cejames (note: you are on your own, make sure you get expert hands-on guidance in all things martial and self-defense)



“All I say is by way of discourse, and nothing by way of advice. I should not speak so boldly if it were my due to be believed.” - Montaigne


I am not a leading authority on any one discipline that I write about and teach, it is my hope and wish that with all the subjects I have studied it provides me an advantage point that I offer in as clear and cohesive writings as possible in introducing the matters in my materials. I hope to serve as one who inspires direction in the practitioner so they can go on to discover greater teachers and professionals that will build on this fundamental foundation. Find the authorities and synthesize a wholehearted and holistic concept, perception and belief that will not drive your practices but rather inspire them to evolve, grow and prosper. My efforts are born of those who are more experienced and knowledgable than I. I hope you find that path! See the bibliography I provide for an initial list of experts, professionals and masters of the subjects.

🧠How Our Minds Predict and Shape Reality🧠

The mind draws the map —

roads appear before the feet,

not after we walk.

 

Expecting the storm,

we flinch before the first drop —

rain finds us ready.

 

CAVEAT: Keikoku (警告)

 

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body.

 

All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction. Readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force.

 

Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors' imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental.

 

All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira C. Ichinose (editor/research assistant) [James-Ichinose]

 

Introduction: The Mind as Architect, Not Mirror

Here is a question worth sitting with for a moment: When you walk into a room full of strangers, are you seeing what is actually there — or are you seeing what your brain has already decided is probably there?


The answer, modern neuroscience tells us, is mostly the latter. Our brains are not passive cameras recording an objective world. They are relentless prediction engines — pattern-seekers that are constantly running simulations of what is about to happen next, and then checking those predictions against incoming sensory data, updating only what does not fit. The philosopher Immanuel Kant had a version of this insight in the eighteenth century when he argued that the mind does not simply receive the world; it imposes structure upon it. Neuroscience, cognitive psychology, and contemplative traditions have been filling in the details ever since.

☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️☯️

This document explores how that process works, what it costs us, and — crucially — how understanding it can help us live with greater clarity, resilience, and intentionality.


The Predictive Brain: A Controlled Hallucination

The dominant framework in contemporary cognitive neuroscience is called predictive processing, or the predictive coding hypothesis. Associated with the neuroscientist Karl Friston and the philosopher Andy Clark, this model proposes that the brain's fundamental job is to minimize prediction error — the gap between what it expects and what sensory signals actually report.


Think of it this way. Imagine you are the director of a massive, dark theater. Every fraction of a second, messengers rush in from every entrance — eyes, ears, skin, gut — shouting about conditions outside. But there are too many messengers and too little time to hear every word clearly, so you have learned to anticipate their reports. Before they arrive, you have already drafted what tonight's performance will look like. When a messenger's news conflicts with your script, you pause the show and revise. When it confirms your script, you nod and keep going. Most of the time, you never hear the small discrepancies — the understudies who could have told you something important.


That is the human brain at work, every waking moment and most sleeping ones.


The Neuroscience Behind the Curtain

Friston's free energy principle formalizes this as a mathematical imperative: living systems must reduce surprise (or entropy) to survive. The brain does this by building generative models of the world — hierarchical structures that generate predictions at every level, from the lowest sensory details up to the highest abstract concepts. When predictions misfire badly enough, the brain updates its model. When they are close enough, it filters the mismatch out.


Anil Seth of the University of Sussex calls perception a 'controlled hallucination.' What we experience as reality is the brain's best guess, constrained by — but not simply read off — incoming data. Under normal conditions, the guess is good enough. Under unusual conditions — extreme stress, sleep deprivation, grief, psychedelic states, fever — the leash loosens and the hallucination becomes more visible.


This is not a flaw. It is the architecture of a system designed to act fast in a complex, ambiguous world. But it carries real costs.


A Parable: The Lantern and the Fog

There was once an old lighthouse keeper who had worked the same stretch of rocky coast for forty years. He knew every current, every hidden reef, every seasonal change in the tides. Ships trusted him, and he had guided thousands safely to harbor.


One winter, a new reef formed — shifted by an underwater tremor — precisely where the keeper had always told captains it was safe to pass. For weeks, the keeper continued to signal the old safe passage. He was not negligent. He simply could not see the new reef, because his lantern was aimed at where the reef had always been.

Three ships ran aground before the keeper walked the shore himself, in daylight, and found what his lantern could not.

 

The parable is not about ignorance or incompetence. The keeper was expert and diligent. It is about the invisible cost of experience: the more refined our predictive model, the less likely we are to notice when reality has quietly changed beneath it. Expertise and perceptual blindness can grow from the same root.


This is what researchers call confirmation bias at the perceptual level — and it operates well below conscious awareness, which is what makes it so difficult to catch.


How Expectations Shape Experience

Priming and the Prepared Mind

One of the most replicated findings in psychology is that priming — exposing someone to one stimulus — reliably shapes how they respond to subsequent stimuli. Read the word 'doctor' and you will identify the word 'nurse' faster than if you had read 'chair.' This is not a conscious strategy; it is the brain pre-loading relevant predictions.


The phenomenon scales up well beyond word recognition. When researchers prime subjects with concepts associated with elderly people — shuffling, forgetting, slowness — those subjects walk measurably more slowly down a corridor afterward (Bargh, Chen, & Burrows, 1996). When medical students are told a patient is depressed before they see the patient, they are more likely to diagnose depression and less likely to notice physical symptoms that might indicate something else.


The mind does not just predict — it actively prepares the perceptual field in the direction of its predictions.


The Placebo and Nocebo Effect: Expectation as Medicine (and Poison)

Perhaps no phenomenon illustrates the mind's shaping power more dramatically than the placebo and nocebo effects. When patients expect a treatment to help, measurable physiological changes occur: endorphins are released, blood pressure drops, immune markers shift. The effect is not imaginary — it is biologically real, triggered by an expectation.


The nocebo effect is the darker mirror. When patients expect harm — from a side effect warning, a threatening diagnosis, a pessimistic doctor — they often experience exactly what they expect, sometimes severely, even when no active substance is involved. Expectation, in these cases, is literally making people sick or well.


Ted Kaptchuk at Harvard has spent decades documenting this, finding that even open-label placebos — where patients know they are receiving a sugar pill — produce significant symptom relief. The explanation is not simple self-deception. It is the brain's predictive machinery responding to the ritual and context of care.


The Reticular Activating System: What You Look For, You Find

The brain's reticular activating system (RAS) functions as a biological spotlight operator. Of the estimated eleven million bits of sensory information arriving each second, the RAS filters what reaches conscious awareness — roughly forty bits. The selection criterion is, to a significant degree, relevance: what the brain has already flagged as important.


This is why when you are expecting a call from someone, you hear every phone that sounds remotely like yours. It is why the grieving widow finds reminders of her husband in every corner of a room full of strangers. It is why the warrior trained for ambush sees threat vectors in an ordinary parking lot. The world has not changed; the filter has.


In the martial arts tradition, the concept of metsuke — 'seeing without seeing,' or soft gaze — is partly a training method for resetting this filter, allowing the practitioner to perceive the whole field rather than what prior expectation has pre-selected. The master's eye is not sharper; it is quieter.


The Story We Tell: Narrative Identity and the Self-Fulfilling Prophecy

The predictive machinery does not only shape our perception of the external world. It shapes who we believe we are — and that belief shapes who we become.


Psychologist Dan McAdams has spent decades studying what he calls narrative identity — the ongoing autobiographical story each of us constructs to make sense of our experience. This story is not a neutral record. It is a generative model of the self, and like all predictive models, it tends to produce evidence that confirms itself.


Tell yourself often enough that you are bad with money, and you will make financial decisions that confirm it — not through deliberate self-sabotage, but through the thousand small attentional and motivational biases that flow from that belief. Tell yourself you are not a writer, and you will unconsciously avoid the practices that would make you one. The self-concept acts as a prior — a Bayesian filter that the brain applies to incoming evidence about the self.


A Metaphor: The Groove in the Stone

Consider a mountain stream running across a stone for a thousand years. The water does not choose its path from among infinite possibilities every time it flows. It finds the groove it carved yesterday, the day before, the decade before — and deepens it. Over time, the groove becomes a channel, the channel becomes a gorge, and the water cannot easily go elsewhere even when conditions have changed and an easier path lies nearby.


Our habitual thought patterns work the same way. Neurologically, frequently-fired neural pathways are reinforced through long-term potentiation — Hebb's Law, often summarized as 'neurons that fire together wire together.' The grooves of habitual thought become the paths of least resistance. We do not simply think our old thoughts; our brains run along them by default.


This is not fatalism. The stream can be redirected. New channels can be carved. But it takes sustained, effortful, deliberate water — not a one-time flood of insight.


Collective Prediction: When Shared Expectations Shape Shared Reality

The process is not limited to individuals. Shared expectations — cultural, institutional, familial — shape collective reality in ways that are visible, measurable, and sometimes disturbing.


The sociologist W. I. Thomas articulated it simply in 1928: 'If men define situations as real, they are real in their consequences.' A bank run is a paradigm case. The bank may be perfectly solvent. But if enough depositors believe it is about to fail and act on that belief simultaneously, the belief produces the event it anticipated. The expectation creates its referent.


In education, the landmark Rosenthal and Jacobson study (1968) — 'Pygmalion in the Classroom' — demonstrated that teacher expectations reliably influenced student performance. Teachers told their students had unusual intellectual potential invested more attention, provided more nuanced feedback, and gave students more opportunities to respond. The students, unsurprisingly, performed better. The prophecy was self-fulfilling not through magic but through the thousand behavioral channels through which expectations travel.


This dynamic operates in medicine, law enforcement, organizational behavior, and international relations. The prediction is rarely innocent. It participates in what it predicts.


Working With the Machine: Practical Implications

Noticing the Prior

The beginning of any useful work with the predictive mind is noticing the prior — the belief, expectation, or narrative frame already active before you engage with a situation. This is harder than it sounds, because by definition the prior operates below conscious attention. But certain practices make the prior more visible.


Mindfulness practices — at their core — train exactly this: the capacity to observe one's own perceptual and cognitive habits from a slight distance without immediately acting on them. In this light, the Zen instruction to approach each moment with 'beginner's mind' (shoshin) is not a spiritual metaphor but a cognitive prescription: suspend the prior, and see what is actually arriving.


Updating the Model

A predictive system that never updates on disconfirming evidence is no longer adaptive — it is defensive. In individuals, that rigidity looks like dogmatism, prejudice, or the clinical phenomenon of fixed delusion. In organizations, it produces strategic failure. In relationships, it produces the maddening experience of speaking to someone who never quite hears what you are actually saying.


Genuine intellectual humility is, at a functional level, the willingness to let disconfirming evidence update the model. This is not the false humility of reflexive self-doubt. It is the calibrated confidence of someone who holds their current model firmly enough to act on it, but lightly enough to revise it when the data warrant.


The Practice of Intentional Priming

If the brain's prior can be shaped by context and repetition, then we have some agency over which priors we cultivate. This is the rational core of what is often presented mystically as 'the law of attraction' or positive thinking. The mechanism is not metaphysical. Deliberately directing attention toward possibilities — through visualization, through deliberate memory retrieval of competence and success, through environment design — biases the predictive system toward those possibilities. The world does not change. The filter changes. And the filter shapes what you notice, pursue, and ultimately encounter.


This is why elite performers in athletics, martial arts, and high-stakes occupations train mental rehearsal as seriously as physical repetition. The brain that has rehearsed a successful performance is running a different — better-calibrated — prior into competition.


A Counter-Argument: The Danger of Over-Psychologizing Reality

Intellectual honesty requires us to take seriously a genuine and important objection to everything argued above: the risk of solipsism, or what we might call the over-psychologized view of reality.


If we overextend the insight that minds shape reality, we arrive in dangerous territory. We risk suggesting that those who suffer poverty, illness, discrimination, or violence are merely failing to predict the right reality — that their suffering is, at some level, a product of their own expectations. This is not only empirically false; it is morally corrosive. It collapses the crucial distinction between what minds contribute to perception and experience and what exists independently of any mind.


The philosopher John Searle made this point with some force against strong social constructionist positions: the fact that we construct our descriptions of mountains does not mean we construct mountains. The rock is real. The bacteria causing the infection is real. The economic structure limiting opportunity is real — not a prediction to be revised away by positive thinking.


There is a version of the predictive mind thesis that is both scientifically credible and morally responsible, and a version that slides into victim-blaming dressed in the language of neuroscience. Holding the former requires maintaining a clear sense of what the evidence actually supports: that minds bias perception, that expectations shape experience, that narratives have real consequences — while insisting that material reality exists, matters, and is not infinitely plastic to belief.


We offer this counter-argument not to undercut the preceding discussion but to keep it honest. The goal of understanding the predictive mind is not to retreat into the bubble of one's own expectations but to engage reality more accurately and more effectively — which sometimes means revising the model, and sometimes means changing the conditions the model is tracking.


Synthesis: Navigating Between the Map and the Territory

The philosopher Alfred Korzybski's formulation has never lost its usefulness: 'The map is not the territory.' Our predictive models — however sophisticated, however well-calibrated by experience — are always maps. The territory is always more than the map.


The practice that follows from everything above is essentially navigational: to hold your map with appropriate confidence while remaining alert to the signs that the territory has shifted — the new reef where you thought the channel was safe. To cultivate the practices — mindfulness, intellectual humility, deliberate model-updating, careful attention to disconfirming evidence — that keep the map as accurate as the territory demands. And to remember that the map is not neutral: it is already shaping the road you build, the risks you take, the people you become.


There is something both humbling and quietly empowering in that recognition. The mind that predicts is the same mind that can learn to predict better. The groove in the stone is the same stone through which a new channel can be carved. The lantern that missed the reef can be turned, by a keeper who walks the shore.


We are, in the deepest sense, the stories we tell about what is coming next. The question worth asking — every morning, in every difficult situation, at every decision point — is whether that story is still true. And if it is not: what would it cost us to update it, and what might we gain?

 

Bibliography

Bargh, J. A., Chen, M., & Burrows, L. (1996). Automaticity of social behavior: Direct effects of trait construct and stereotype activation on action. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 71(2), 230–244. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.71.2.230

Clark, A. (2016). Surfing uncertainty: Prediction, action, and the embodied mind. Oxford University Press.

Friston, K. (2010). The free-energy principle: A unified brain theory? Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 11(2), 127–138. https://doi.org/10.1038/nrn2787

Kaptchuk, T. J., Friedlander, E., Kelley, J. M., Sanchez, M. N., Kokkotou, E., Singer, J. P., Kowalczykowski, M., Miller, F. G., Kirsch, I., & Lembo, A. J. (2010). Placebos without deception: A randomized controlled trial in irritable bowel syndrome. PLOS ONE, 5(12), e15591. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015591

Korzybski, A. (1933). Science and sanity: An introduction to non-Aristotelian systems and general semantics. International Non-Aristotelian Library Publishing Company.

Langer, E. J. (1989). Mindfulness. Addison-Wesley.

McAdams, D. P. (2001). The psychology of life stories. Review of General Psychology, 5(2), 100–122. https://doi.org/10.1037/1089-2680.5.2.100

Merton, R. K. (1948). The self-fulfilling prophecy. The Antioch Review, 8(2), 193–210. https://doi.org/10.2307/4609267

Rosenthal, R., & Jacobson, L. (1968). Pygmalion in the classroom: Teacher expectation and pupils' intellectual development. Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Searle, J. R. (1995). The construction of social reality. Free Press.

Seth, A. K. (2021). Being you: A new science of consciousness. Dutton.

Thomas, W. I., & Thomas, D. S. (1928). The child in America: Behavior problems and programs. Knopf.

 

© CEJames & Akira C. Ichinose [James-Ichinose]. All rights reserved.

🇺🇸The Lantern You Cannot Hold🇺🇸

A Conversational Exploration of Consciousness


Still water at dawn—

the fish does not know the pond,

yet is the water.


Who lights the candle

that illuminates itself?

The flame asks nothing.


CAVEAT: Keikoku (警告)

The content presented in this work is produced solely for educational, research, and creative purposes and does not constitute legal advice, a certified self-defense methodology, or the official position of any organization, institution, or government body. All views and opinions expressed herein are those of the authors alone. Laws and statutes governing the use of force, personal protection, and related conduct vary by jurisdiction. Readers and practitioners are strongly advised to consult a qualified attorney and to seek instruction from a certified self-defense professional before making any decisions regarding personal protection or the use of force. 


Where this work contains fictional narrative, all names, characters, incidents, and dialogue are products of the authors’ imagination and are not to be construed as factual, historical, or representative of any real person, living or dead, or any actual event. Any resemblance to real persons or events is entirely coincidental. All content is protected under applicable copyright law. Unauthorized reproduction, distribution, or transmission of this material, in whole or in part, by any means — electronic, mechanical, photographic, or otherwise — is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the authors.

 

by CEJames (researcher/author) & Akira C. Ichinose (editor/research assistant) [James-Ichinose]


The Question That Asks Itself

Here is an odd thing to notice: you are reading these words. Somewhere behind your eyes, something is happening that is more than mere information processing — there is, presumably, a felt sense of reading, a quality of experience, a little interior light that makes these marks on a page into meaning. That interior light is what philosophers and scientists call consciousness, and it is, without question, one of the most bewildering puzzles in all of human inquiry.


The philosopher David Chalmers (1995) gave the puzzle its now-famous name: the "hard problem." The easy problems of consciousness — explaining how the brain integrates information, controls behavior, responds to stimuli — are actually quite tractable in principle. We can imagine, with enough neuroscience, explaining all of those. But the hard problem asks: why is there something it is like to be a brain doing all that? Why isn't it all just dark machinery, humming away without any inner glow at all?


Nobody has cracked it. And yet here we are, undeniably conscious, asking the question. It is a bit like a lantern wondering about its own light: the very act of wondering is evidence of the thing being wondered about.

 

A Parable: The Fisherman and the River

An old fisherman spent his life on a wide river. He knew every current, every eddy, every fish that rose to the surface at dusk. One evening a young student rowed out to him and asked, 'Old man, what is the river?' The fisherman was quiet a long while. Finally he said, 'I cannot show it to you from the outside, because there is no outside — not for me. I am in it. It is in me. My nets smell of it. When I dream, I dream in water.' The student returned to shore no wiser in words, but carrying something she had not had before.


Consciousness is like that river. We cannot step outside it to examine it the way a scientist might examine a specimen under glass — because the examination is itself happening inside it. Every theory of consciousness, every experiment, every philosophical argument, is conducted by a conscious mind using the very thing it is trying to understand. This is not a flaw in the investigation; it is the central, astonishing feature of the terrain.

 

The Main Maps — and Their Limits

Several well-developed theories attempt to chart this river. It is worth surveying them conversationally, because each captures something true even where it falls short.


Global Workspace Theory (GWT), developed by Bernard Baars (1988) and extended by Dehaene and colleagues, pictures consciousness as something like a broadcasting system. Imagine a large theater with many specialist workers offstage — vision, memory, language, emotion — each doing their job in the dark. Consciousness is what happens when one of those specialists steps into the spotlight at center stage, and their information suddenly becomes available to everyone else in the building. On this view, to be conscious of something is to have it globally broadcast across the brain. GWT has impressive empirical support and maps neatly onto neural findings about the prefrontal cortex and thalamocortical loops.


Integrated Information Theory (IIT), championed by Giulio Tononi (2004), takes a radically different tack. It proposes that consciousness is identical to integrated information — a mathematical quantity called phi (Φ). The more a system's parts causally constrain one another in an irreducible way, the more conscious it is. A human brain has very high Φ. A simple logic gate, very low. Intriguingly, IIT implies that some form of experience might be far more widespread in nature than we typically assume — a position that edges toward panpsychism, the view that experience is a fundamental feature of reality itself.


Higher-Order Theories (HOT), associated with David Rosenthal (1990) and others, propose that a mental state is conscious only when there is another mental state representing it — a thought about a thought. On this view, what makes your experience of the color red conscious is not the raw sensory signal, but your mind's implicit representation of itself having that sensory signal. Critics have worried this creates an infinite regress, though defenders argue the hierarchy terminates somewhere.


Predictive Processing (PP), synthesized powerfully by Andy Clark (2016) and Karl Friston, offers yet another lens. The brain, on this account, is fundamentally a prediction machine — constantly generating models of what is about to happen and updating them when reality diverges. Consciousness, on some versions of this view, is what it is like to be a generative model running in biological hardware, perpetually sculpting experience out of prior expectations and sensory surprise.

 

Metaphors Worth Sitting With

William James, who gave us the phrase stream of consciousness in 1890, suggested that experience is not a collection of discrete beads strung on a wire but a continuous flow — always moving, always partly ahead of itself, shaped by attention the way a riverbank shapes water. That metaphor still feels true. We do not experience the world in still frames; we experience it as ongoing, context-rich, already-interpreted before we can quite catch it.


Daniel Dennett (1991) offers a more deflationary metaphor: consciousness, he suggests, is something like the "fame" a neural signal achieves in the brain's ongoing competition for representational dominance. There is no single Cartesian theater where the show is watched by a homunculus; there is just the show, and "fame" is what we mistakenly reify into a separate spectator. Many find this bracing; others find it frankly unsatisfying — as though explaining why a symphony is beautiful by describing the motion of air molecules.


Here is a metaphor of our own making: imagine consciousness as a campfire in a vast dark forest. The fire does not illuminate the whole forest, only the circle immediately around it. Beyond that circle, the trees stand in darkness — not because they do not exist, but because the light has not reached them. What we attend to is lit; the vast remainder of our neural processing hums in the dark. And the fire itself — who built it? Who feeds it? We warm ourselves at it without ever quite seeing the hands that struck the flint.

 

Qualia — The Color of the Inside

Frank Jackson (1982) presented one of philosophy's most elegant thought experiments: Mary is a brilliant scientist who has lived her entire life in a black-and-white room. She has learned every physical fact there is to know about color vision — the wavelengths, the cone cells, the neural pathways. Then one day she steps out of the room and sees, for the first time, a ripe red tomato.


Does she learn something new? Jackson thought yes: she learns what it is like to see red. That felt quality — what philosophers call a quale (plural: qualia) — seems resistant to any purely physical description. Thomas Nagel (1974) made a similar point with his famous paper "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?" — arguing that no amount of behavioral or neurological description captures the inner, felt dimension of echolocation experience.


These arguments do not prove dualism is true — that the mind is made of some non-physical stuff. But they do make vivid exactly why consciousness is so hard. The felt redness of red, the dull ache of a bruised knee, the subtle unease of being watched — these qualities seem to resist being fully captured in the third-person language of science, which deals in structures and functions. Whether that resistance is permanent and deep, or merely a symptom of our current explanatory immaturity, remains genuinely open.

 

Voices from the East — No-Self and Pure Awareness

Western analytic philosophy tends to frame consciousness as a property of individual minds, each a self-contained lantern. But Buddhist philosophy challenges this framing at the root. The doctrine of anatta — non-self — holds that what we call "the self" is not a fixed, unified entity but a flowing process of aggregates: form, sensation, perception, mental formations, and consciousness itself. The experience of being a unified, continuous self is, on this view, a kind of useful fiction, an emergent narrative rather than a metaphysical bedrock.


This is not mere mysticism; contemporary neuroscientists like Francisco Varela, Evan Thompson, and Eleanor Rosch — in their landmark work The Embodied Mind (1991) — argued compellingly for a dialogue between cognitive science and Buddhist phenomenology. Their enactivist framework holds that mind and world co-arise, that experience is not inside the head but is constituted in the dynamic interaction between organism and environment.


Advaita Vedanta offers yet another angle: pure consciousness (Brahman) is not a property of the brain but the fundamental ground of all reality. Individual consciousness is like a wave that believes itself separate from the ocean. The wave is real; its separateness is the illusion. Whether or not one accepts the metaphysics, this tradition has cultivated extraordinarily refined first-person methods — meditation, introspection, contemplative inquiry — that have generated phenomenological data Western science is only beginning to take seriously.

 

The Silicon Question — Can Machines Be Conscious?

As artificial intelligence grows more sophisticated, the question of machine consciousness moves from science fiction to genuine philosophical urgency. John Searle's famous Chinese Room argument (1980) suggests that symbol manipulation — however fluent — is not sufficient for understanding, and by extension for consciousness. A system might pass every behavioral test for awareness while remaining, in Searle's vivid phrase, "syntax without semantics": all the right outputs, none of the inner light.


Others are less certain. If IIT is correct, then consciousness supervenes on causal structure, not on biology — and a sufficiently integrated artificial system might indeed have genuine experience. If Global Workspace Theory is correct, the same logic applies: what matters is the functional architecture, not the substrate.


We sit here, at this moment, genuinely uncertain. That uncertainty should be taken seriously — not as an excuse for anthropomorphism, but as a reminder that our intuitions about which systems can have inner lives were formed in a world that contained only one kind of conscious entity. We may be like villagers who have only ever seen candles, trying to decide whether a light bulb counts as fire.

 

A Counter-Argument — And Why It Deserves Respect

It would be intellectually dishonest to present all of the above without acknowledging the most serious counter-position: eliminative materialism, or what is sometimes called the "deflationary" or "illusionist" view of consciousness. Its most rigorous contemporary advocate is Keith Frankish (2016), building on earlier work by Dennett.


The eliminativist argues, bluntly, that qualia — as traditionally conceived — do not exist. The felt redness of red, the raw "what-it-is-likeness," is itself a kind of introspective illusion. We are misrepresenting our own inner states. On this view, Mary the color scientist does not learn a new non-physical fact when she sees red; she updates a functional representation, and her sense that she learned something irreducibly qualitative is itself a product of how the brain models its own processes. Frankish calls this "illusionism": the illusion is not that we are conscious, but that consciousness has this mysterious, non-physical, irreducibly qualitative character that resists physical explanation.


This view is coherent. It has the considerable virtue of not requiring us to posit anything beyond the physical. And perspective-taking demands we acknowledge that if the eliminativist is right, much of the preceding discussion has been chasing a ghost — a ghost conjured by the peculiar way brains model themselves.


Where we respectfully disagree — and intellectual humility requires that word "respectfully" to carry genuine weight — is on the phenomenology itself. The eliminativist must account for the very vivid impression of qualia, and the explanatory gap between "functional representation" and the felt experience of redness seems, to many careful thinkers, to remain unclosed. Frankish acknowledges this; his view does not deny the challenge. But to say the impression of qualitative experience is an illusion is to invoke an illusion that seems, paradoxically, to have qualitative character of its own. The ghost has a very convincing heartbeat.

We hold this question open. That openness is not weakness; it is the appropriate epistemic posture before one of the deepest puzzles in existence.

 

Why It Matters — Practical Implications

One might ask whether all this philosophizing has any bearing on ordinary life. It does — more than might be expected.


In the martial arts traditions we write about — particularly the Okinawan and Japanese lineages — consciousness is not merely an abstract puzzle but the very medium of practice. 


  • Mushin (no-mind), 
  • metsuke (gaze that is also a quality of attention), 
  • fudoshin (immovable mind), 
  • kakugo (resolute readiness) — 


all of these concepts describe specific modes of conscious awareness, cultivated deliberately over years of practice. They presuppose that consciousness is plastic, trainable, and consequential: that what you attend to shapes what you perceive, and what you perceive shapes what you can do.


Modern neuroscience, for its part, strongly supports this intuition. Research on attention (Posner & Petersen, 1990), on mindfulness-based interventions (Kabat-Zinn, 1994), on the relationship between interoceptive awareness and emotional regulation (Craig, 2002) — all converge on the view that deliberate cultivation of conscious attention has real, measurable effects on brain function, emotional resilience, and even physical health.


To take consciousness seriously as a philosophical mystery is also to take seriously the practices that work with it. The meditator, the martial artist, the contemplative — these figures are not escaping from the hard problem. They are doing empirical research on it, in the only laboratory available: the laboratory of lived experience.

 

Closing Thoughts — The Flame That Questions Itself

We do not know what consciousness is. That is the honest thing to say. We know a great deal about its neural correlates, its functional architecture, its evolutionary history, and its disruption in pathological states. But the question of why physical processes give rise to felt experience — why there is something it is like to be you, reading this, right now — remains irreducibly mysterious.


The mystery is not a failure. It is an invitation. It invites rigorous science, careful philosophy, contemplative practice, and — perhaps most of all — a certain quality of attention: the willingness to sit with a question that does not resolve, to hold it the way one holds a hand grenade with the pin still in, carefully, without throwing it away.


Remember the old fisherman on the river. He could not step outside the water to show you what water is. But he could offer you a net, a paddle, and the accumulated wisdom of a life spent immersed. Perhaps that is, for now, enough.

 

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