The hard problem of consciousness — why and how physical processes give rise to subjective experience — remains unresolved across neuroscience, physics, and philosophy of mind. This paper proposes the Theory of Emergent Self-awareness (TES), a philosophical and systems-level hypothesis arguing that consciousness is not a byproduct of neural complexity but a phase transition in information topology. We introduce three interrelated concepts: (1) the pre-conscious ground state — a condition in which information-bearing energy flows with inherent directionality but without recursive self-reference; (2) the Integration Drive — a proposed fundamental tendency of non-equilibrium informational systems toward recursive coupling; and (3) the informational vortex — the self-referential loop through which a system begins to model itself, constituting the onset of awareness. We situate these concepts within existing frameworks — Friston's Free Energy Principle, Tononi's Integrated Information Theory, Prigogine's dissipative structures, and Hofstadter's strange loops — while introducing a speculative but physically motivated reconceptualization of information flow as a substrate-independent phenomenon. The framework generates five testable predictions concerning threshold dynamics, metabolic signatures, directional asymmetry of information flow, and the absence of sustained recursive self-modeling in current large language models. The paper explicitly distinguishes between formal hypothesis, empirical prediction, and philosophical speculation throughout.
Jana Kolářová (Sat,) studied this question.
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