A critical commentary on the state of consciousness science following the COGITATE adversarial collaboration (Nature, 2025) — the largest and most rigorous experimental test ever conducted on competing theories of consciousness (IIT vs. GNWT). The paper examines why the experiment's inconclusive results produced no public crisis and no theoretical revision, and analyzes three institutional responses: attacks on IIT as pseudoscience, appeals for further experiments, and methodological critiques of the study itself. The central argument is that COGITATE did not fail because the theories are empirically inadequate, but because they are not aimed at the problem they claim to solve — the hard problem of consciousness. The essay concludes by identifying alternative physical properties of the brain (biogenic magnetite, pineal calcite piezoelectricity, quantum effects in microtubules) that remain unexamined in relation to consciousness — not because they are technically inaccessible, but because they are absent from the research agenda. Companion essay to Oliva (2026a) and Oliva (2026b).
Juliana Oliva (Wed,) studied this question.