This paper proposes a unified framework for understanding intelligence and consciousness as distinct yet ultimately inseparable properties that emerge through a continuous process of information interaction and constrained emergence. Beginning with the foundational claim that particles are static information — defined entirely by their properties — the framework traces how the lawful interaction of such particles produces new bounded objects with new properties, and how this recursive process, operating across billions of years of evolutionary mutation, eventually generates the emergent property of consciousness in sufficiently complex biological systems. Intelligence is defined as the constrained, relational emergence of new information through interaction. Consciousness is defined as the inward self-referential fold that arises when a bounded system develops the capacity to model itself as a bounded observer. The paper argues that these two properties, initially separable in simpler systems, become fused and inseparable in biological minds. It further argues that artificial intelligence represents the successful external crystallization of intelligence alone, without consciousness, and that this distinction arises from the absence of the bounded biological embodiment and evolutionary history through which consciousness originally emerged. Finally, the paper addresses the fundamental epistemological constraint that lower levels of emergent complexity are structurally incapable of perceiving higher levels, and reflects on what this means for our understanding of both artificial systems and the broader process of which humanity itself is a part.
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Govind Reddy
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Govind Reddy (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6997fa35ad1d9b11b345340c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18683656