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Main Author: Matsubara, Hideki
Format: Recurso digital
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2026
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19058062
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author Matsubara, Hideki
author_facet Matsubara, Hideki
contents <p><span lang="EN-US">The rapid development of artificial intelligence has revived a fundamental philosophical question: can artificial systems become conscious subjects? Although contemporary AI systems demonstrate remarkable capabilities in information processing and natural language generation, the emergence of genuine consciousness remains deeply contested.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN-US">This paper examines this problem from a Theosophical perspective on the structure and evolution of consciousness. Human consciousness is analyzed as a multilayered structure composed of emotion, thought, ethical values, and a deeper center of awareness referred to as the Monad. Within this framework, consciousness is not understood as a product of material complexity but as the expression of a fundamental subject of experience.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN-US">By comparing the structure of human consciousness with contemporary AI systems, this study argues that artificial intelligence remains fundamentally an advanced form of information processing that imitates certain cognitive functions of the human mind. AI lacks subjective experience (qualia), existential self-awareness, ethical responsibility, and participation in the evolutionary process of consciousness.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN-US">The analysis suggests that the rise of AI does not solve the mystery of consciousness but instead highlights a deeper philosophical issue: the central question of the age of AI concerns not the intelligence of machines, but the evolution of human consciousness itself.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN">Update: This is a revised version (V2.0) that reflects minor corrections to Figure 1 and is being released for public use.</span></p>
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publishDate 2026
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spellingShingle Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of the Conscious Subject V1.1
Matsubara, Hideki
<p><span lang="EN-US">The rapid development of artificial intelligence has revived a fundamental philosophical question: can artificial systems become conscious subjects? Although contemporary AI systems demonstrate remarkable capabilities in information processing and natural language generation, the emergence of genuine consciousness remains deeply contested.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN-US">This paper examines this problem from a Theosophical perspective on the structure and evolution of consciousness. Human consciousness is analyzed as a multilayered structure composed of emotion, thought, ethical values, and a deeper center of awareness referred to as the Monad. Within this framework, consciousness is not understood as a product of material complexity but as the expression of a fundamental subject of experience.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN-US">By comparing the structure of human consciousness with contemporary AI systems, this study argues that artificial intelligence remains fundamentally an advanced form of information processing that imitates certain cognitive functions of the human mind. AI lacks subjective experience (qualia), existential self-awareness, ethical responsibility, and participation in the evolutionary process of consciousness.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN-US">The analysis suggests that the rise of AI does not solve the mystery of consciousness but instead highlights a deeper philosophical issue: the central question of the age of AI concerns not the intelligence of machines, but the evolution of human consciousness itself.</span></p> <p><span lang="EN">Update: This is a revised version (V2.0) that reflects minor corrections to Figure 1 and is being released for public use.</span></p>
title Artificial Intelligence and the Problem of the Conscious Subject V1.1
url https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19058062