When the switch is flipped – A new #physics of #consciousness

In his #guest post on #philosophies, Dr. #WolfgangStegemann proposes a radical reformulation.

Wolfgang describes #consciousness not as a mysterious addition to #matter, but as a #state of a #system that occurs when certain #structural conditions are met.

https://philosophies.de/index.php/2026/02/28/neue-physik-des-bewusstseins/

#PhilosophyOfMind #Neuroscience #Criticality #SelfOrganization #Autocatalysis #DynamicSystems

What are your plans for the second week of July? The correct answer is: to participate in the Sigma Phi Conference in Chania! From 6 July to 10 July, a huge event covering all topics of interest in Statistical Physics. And, there will be also a special workshop on Mathematical Ideas across Multiple Scales in Networks (or MAIMUN, for short), organized by yours truly and with an impressive lineup of speakers, including Ginestra Bianconi, Stefano Boccaletti, Sebastian Contreras, Piero De Lellis, Tiziana Di Matteo, Fakhteh Ghanbarnejad, Sarika Jalan, José Mendes, Osnat Mokryn and Punit Parmananda!

Please boost far and wide, and spread the news to students, colleagues, and anyone who may be interested!

http://www.sigmaphi.polito.it/index.php

#statisticalphysics #physics #mathematics #science #disorder #criticality #fluids #networks #graphs #biophysics #economics #sociology #complexity

Topics and Format

AI and digital can feel remote, and absolute. My chapter includes discussion of my ‘International Best Practice’ digital inclusion research project in Estonia and practical teaching assignments, with each centring on how to approach AI with criticality to help rehumanise our interactions with AI and empower.

#AI #Criticality #Empowering

Toward a physical theory of information processing:
"Functional Percolation: Criticality of Form and Function"
https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.09317
#complexsystems #complexityscience #networkscience #ai #percolation #cascades #criticality #artificialintelligence
DMT-induced shifts in criticality correlate with self-dissolution

Psychedelics profoundly alter subjective experience and brain dynamics. Brain oscillations express signatures of near-critical dynamics, relevant for healthy function. Alterations in the proximity to criticality have been suggested to underlie the experiential and neurological effects of psychedelics. Here, we investigate the effects of a psychedelic substance (DMT) on the criticality of brain oscillations, and in relation to subjective experience, in humans of either sex. We find that DMT shifts the dynamics of brain oscillations away from criticality in alpha and adjacent frequency bands. In this context, entropy is increased while complexity is reduced. We find that the criticality shifts observed in alpha and theta bands correlate with the intensity ratings of self-dissolution, a hallmark of psychedelic experience. Finally, using a recently developed metric, the functional excitatory-inhibitory ratio, we find that the DMT-induced criticality shift in brain oscillations is towards subcritical regimes. These findings have major implications for the understanding of psychedelic mechanisms of action in the human brain and for the neurological basis of altered states of consciousness. Significance statement Criticality is characterized by fluctuations occurring on a wide range of spatiotemporal scales and high complexity. Here, we investigate the effects of DMT, a classic psychedelic, on criticality of brain oscillations and in relation to subjective experience. We find that DMT shifts the normally dominant alpha oscillations towards a quieter subcritical state, increasing entropy while reducing complexity, and that this shift correlates with intensity of disruption of the sense of self.

Journal of Neuroscience
You've (Likely) Been Playing The Game of Life Wrong

YouTube
Intrigued by Barry O'Reilly's #ResidualityTheory that seems grounded on a shared experience in approaching solutions in new domains, applying random stressors for improving our approach to solution architecture, #criticality and thinking of some sort of variety engineering described by Kauffman Networks @ewolff https://software-architektur.tv/2025/09/19/episode279.html
Episode 279 - Residuality Theory with Barry O’Reilly | Software Architektur im Stream

Residuality theory is a revolutionary new theory of software design.

And while the use of this term is different in academia than in everyday life, it is not entirely academic. For example, the #SCQF describes Level-12 jobs requiring exactly this type of #criticality in multiple areas:
https://scqf.org.uk/interactive-framework/level-12/

#Scotland #Qualification #AcademicWriting

Level 12

Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework

A quotation from Bertrand Russell

A great many worries can be diminished by realizing the unimportance of the matter which is causing the anxiety.

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) English mathematician and philosopher
Conquest of Happiness, Part 1, ch. 5 “Fatigue” (1930)

Sourcing, notes: wist.info/russell-bertrand/772…

#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #bertrandrussell #anxiety #criticality #fretfulness #importance #unimportance #urgency #worry

Conquest of Happiness, Part 1, ch. 5 "Fatigue" (1930) - Russell, Bertrand | WIST Quotations

A great many worries can be diminished by realizing the unimportance of the matter which is causing the anxiety.

WIST Quotations

A quotation from Russell

One of the symptoms of approaching nervous break-down is the belief that one’s work is terribly important, and that to take a holiday would bring all kinds of disaster.

Bertrand Russell (1872-1970) English mathematician and philosopher
Conquest of Happiness, Part 1, ch. 5 “Fatigue” (1930)

Sourcing, notes: wist.info/russell-bertrand/338…

#quote #quotes #quotation #catastrophizing #collapse #criticality #ego #fatigue #grandiosity #importance #nerves #nervousbreakdown #priorities #work

Conquest of Happiness, Part 1, ch. 5 "Fatigue" (1930) - Russell, Bertrand | WIST Quotations

One of the symptoms of approaching nervous break-down is the belief that one's work is terribly important, and that to take a holiday would bring all kinds of disaster.

WIST Quotations