Mainstream neuroscience, rooted in Cartesian dualism and materialist reductionism, has failed to resolve the "hard problem" of consciousness, treating subjective experience (qualia) as an epiphenomenon of neural computation. This theoretical impasse demands a new paradigm. Here we introduce Epic Cognition Theory (ECT) as a post‑Cartesian framework integrating philosophical enaction, information geometry, the Free Energy Principle, quantum biology, and 3D genomics. ECT proposes that consciousness is not a passive computation but an active, top‑down process of geometric meaning‑construction—a "prospective narrative"—that minimizes variational free energy. Conscious intention bends the informational manifold's Fisher metric (intentional curvature), altering geodesic (energy‑minimizing) paths. This bending is physically realized through a coherent, blue‑shifted biophotonic field and mapped to 3D chromatin architecture via the Ryu‑Takayanagi formula, where TAD boundaries and cohesin‑mediated loop extrusion become the physical manifestation of geodesic selection. The model resolves long‑standing puzzles: the Libet paradox (reinterpreting the readiness potential as a stochastic fluctuation in a bent geometry), the placebo effect (belief as geometric bending), and the efficacy of mind‑body therapies (narrative re‑framing as top‑down chromatin reorganization). ECT offers a testable, non‑reductionist foundation for post‑Cartesian neuroscience, reframing the brain not as a passive computer but as an organic antenna that actively co‑creates reality through the geometry‑bending power of intentional meaning.
Sedat Büyük (Wed,) studied this question.