Brain–computer interfaces and the code-switching of consciousness
摘要
This discussion paper argues that brain–computer interface (BCI) technology provides empirical evidence for substrate-independent consciousness. Beginning from physicalist premises, I draw on neuroscientist Jon Lieff’s research showing consciousness operates at molecular levels where biological and mechanical distinctions dissolve. Examining ordinary speech reveals consciousness already traverses non-conscious media (air) while preserving embodied experience, suggesting substrate transfer is fundamental to consciousness rather than exceptional. BCI systems like Synchron’s stentrode demonstrate that neural signals transfer through multiple substrates—Bluetooth, TCP/IP protocols, electromagnetic transmission—while preserving functional content and phenomenological continuity. Using information technology examples, particularly networking protocols and PowerLAN technology, I show consciousness exhibits “code-switching”: transferring between physical media while maintaining information patterns. Language functions as a protocol stack rather than consciousness itself, with pre-linguistic consciousness operating through pattern processing at cellular and molecular levels. This raises a provocative question: when consciousness travels through wires, is the conduit itself conscious? I conclude by connecting this to panpsychism, understood as physical reality constituting a universal mathematical information network. An operational framework and practical examples demonstrate that biological–mechanical consciousness integration is empirically verifiable and currently functional.