This paper explores the intersection of automata theory, large language model (LLM) architectures, and the epistemological boundaries established by Kurt Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorems. While the probabilistic and emergent nature of modern AI—often termed "Software 2.0"—fuels reductionist, materialist views that reduce human consciousness to a mere user-interface illusion, Roger Penrose’s Gödelian critiques challenge this paradigm. Rather than placing the human brain on a pedestal of biological exceptionalism, this paper proposes the Dimensional Projection Theory of Consciousness, redefining the brain as a highly complex physical receiver embedded within the geometric fabric of higher-dimensional spacetime. We hypothesize that cognition is not an act of computation, but rather the process of the brain's quantum microstructures momentarily accessing higher dimensions (e.g., a 5th dimension) of macro spacetime, rendering thoughts as lower-dimensional cross-sections or projections into our 3D reality.
Ufuk Tiryaki (Thu,) studied this question.