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CONCEPT

CEMI Field Theory

Johnjoe McFadden's proposal that consciousness is an electromagnetic field phenomenon—the brain's endogenous EM field integrating information at a level that neural computation alone cannot achieve—with provocative implications for why digital computers lack awareness.
The Conscious Electromagnetic Information (CEMI) field theory, developed by University of Surrey molecular geneticist Johnjoe McFadden since 2002, proposes that the brain is a hybrid system: a digital computer (neurons firing or not) coupled to an analog field processor (the brain's electromagnetic field generated by coordinated neural activity). On this account, consciousness is not an emergent property of neural complexity but a field-level phenomenon—awareness is the integrated electromagnetic field binding distributed neural activity into a unified experience. The theory explains several features of consciousness that purely neural models struggle with: the unity of experience (field integration), the continuity of the present moment (field persistence), and the binding of sensory modalities (field coupling). The AI implication is provocative: digital computers deliberately suppress electromagnetic field interactions between components (through Faraday cage shielding of each circuit) to ensure reliable operation—and this very suppression may be what prevents artificial systems from generating the field-level integration that consciousness requires. True AGI might require not faster digital processing
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