This paper argues that the subjective aspect of consciousness (phenomenal consciousness) cannot be exhaustively explained by any functional model based on information feedback. This predicament does not stem from a temporary lack of empirical data, but is rooted in the self-referential structure of conscious systems: any attempt to explain the system's own subjectivity using its internal processes inevitably falls into an epistemological closure. By formally defining an "information-feedback-storage" model and introducing Gödel's incompleteness theorems as a philosophical analogy, this paper points out that the explanatory gap is essentially a self-referential dilemma—for a system to fully explain itself, it must stand outside itself, which is logically impossible. This paper does not claim to prove substance dualism, but merely reveals an unbridgeable cognitive gap between third-person informational descriptions and first-person subjective presence; this gap is a limitation of descriptive frameworks, not evidence that mind is detached from physical substrates. The conclusion is that the irreducibility of consciousness is not a theoretical failure, but a necessary boundary condition of self-referential systems.
Ma et al. (Thu,) studied this question.