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- Maria Strømme stated regarding her theory: "Yes, you could say so. But above all, it is a theory in which consciousness comes first, and structures such as time, space and matter arise afterwards. It is a very ambitious attempt to describe how our experienced reality functions."
- Immanuel Kant claimed that Euclid’s axioms of geometry, basic features of space and time, metaphysical truths, and moral truths possess metaphysical necessity, meaning they hold universally and are eternal, even if they are contingent in a strict logical sense.
- Any argument attempting to prove the Principle of the Uniformity of Nature (PUN) by stating that nature is uniform across time and space is circular because the second premise of such an argument is PUN itself.
- The argument for the persistence of objects into the future relies on the premises that an object has persisted in the past and that nature is uniform across time and space, leading to the conclusion that the object will persist in the future.
- Hallucinogens produce changes in mood and affect, and can alter the perception of time, space, and self in ways that typically occur only during dreaming or religious exaltation.
- As an object nears the speed of light, time slows down, and at the speed of light, time stops, which suggests that light's motion alters time itself rather than simply moving through space.
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's philosophical system downgrades the physical world to a consensual illusion, where matter, space, and time are constructs of mental phenomena.
- David Chalmers argues that if conscious experience cannot be explained in terms of more basic entities, it must be considered irreducible, similar to the fundamental categories of space and time.
- David Chalmers argues that consciousness is a fundamental law of nature because it is irreducible to lower-level facts, similar to space and time.
- David Chalmers notes that the evidence used by physicists to introduce the fundamental categories of space and time is spatiotemporal in nature, just as the evidence for experience is experiential in nature.
- Classical physics is characterized by an unchanging structure of space and time based on unchangeable laws that account for reality, causality, continuity, and locality.
- A new theoretical model proposes that consciousness is the fundamental basis of reality, existing prior to time, space, and matter.
- David Chalmers suggests that consciousness might be a fundamental property of the universe, similar to space, time, or gravity.
- The author defines the 'Harder Problem of Consciousness' as the effort to explain space and time in order to securely position the elements needed to describe the Hard Problem of Consciousness, which is characterized as the alchemy of qualia.
- William Clifford (1845-1879) was a mathematician and philosopher whose work on the nature of space and time prefigured Albert Einstein's general relativity.
- Maria Strømme, a Professor of Materials Science at Uppsala University, proposes a theoretical model in AIP Advances where consciousness is the fundamental element of reality, from which time, space, and matter arise.
- Immanuel Kant argues that space, time, causation, quantity, and quality are represented to humans in innate structures or concepts that the mind is fitted with prior to experience.
- The paper 'Language models represent space and time' (arXiv:2310.02207) is cited in the survey 'A Survey on the Theory and Mechanism of Large Language Models' regarding representation.
- Quantum vibration, also referred to as a wave, is defined as a periodic oscillation extending over space and time, characterized by wavelength, frequency, and amplitude.
- Alfred North Whitehead proposed a metaphysical system that replaces the traditional triad of matter, space, and time with events and the ongoing processes of their creation and extinction as the fundamental nature of the world.
- Immanuel Kant (1787), Edmund Husserl (1913), and subsequent phenomenologists demonstrated that the phenomenal structure of experience is intentional and includes complex representations of time, space, cause, body, self, and the world.
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz viewed space and time as sets of relations among monads, rather than as fundamental entities, suggesting they are non-spatial and non-temporal in their own nature.
- Immanuel Kant argued that phenomenal consciousness cannot be a mere succession of associated ideas, but must be the experience of a conscious self situated in an objective world structured by space, time, and causality.
- Susan Schneider (2018) notes that in many popular approaches to quantum gravity, neither space nor time are considered fundamental entities.
- Maria Strømme's theoretical framework posits that consciousness is not a byproduct of brain activity, but rather a fundamental field underlying all experience, including matter, space, time, and life itself.
- Alfred North Whitehead proposed a radical reform of the conception of the fundamental nature of the world, replacing the traditional triad of matter, space, and time with events and the ongoing processes of their creation and extinction.
Facts (26)
Sources
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2015 Edition) plato.stanford.edu 4 facts
claimGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's philosophical system downgrades the physical world to a consensual illusion, where matter, space, and time are constructs of mental phenomena.
claimWilliam Clifford (1845-1879) was a mathematician and philosopher whose work on the nature of space and time prefigured Albert Einstein's general relativity.
claimAlfred North Whitehead proposed a metaphysical system that replaces the traditional triad of matter, space, and time with events and the ongoing processes of their creation and extinction as the fundamental nature of the world.
perspectiveGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz viewed space and time as sets of relations among monads, rather than as fundamental entities, suggesting they are non-spatial and non-temporal in their own nature.
Is Reality an Illusion? New Theory Challenges Modern Physics scitechdaily.com 2 facts
quoteMaria Strømme stated regarding her theory: "Yes, you could say so. But above all, it is a theory in which consciousness comes first, and structures such as time, space and matter arise afterwards. It is a very ambitious attempt to describe how our experienced reality functions."
claimMaria Strømme, a Professor of Materials Science at Uppsala University, proposes a theoretical model in AIP Advances where consciousness is the fundamental element of reality, from which time, space, and matter arise.
Sources of Knowledge: Rationalism, Empiricism, and the Kantian ... press.rebus.community 2 facts
claimImmanuel Kant claimed that Euclid’s axioms of geometry, basic features of space and time, metaphysical truths, and moral truths possess metaphysical necessity, meaning they hold universally and are eternal, even if they are contingent in a strict logical sense.
claimImmanuel Kant argues that space, time, causation, quantity, and quality are represented to humans in innate structures or concepts that the mind is fitted with prior to experience.
Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu 2 facts
claimAny argument attempting to prove the Principle of the Uniformity of Nature (PUN) by stating that nature is uniform across time and space is circular because the second premise of such an argument is PUN itself.
claimThe argument for the persistence of objects into the future relies on the premises that an object has persisted in the past and that nature is uniform across time and space, leading to the conclusion that the object will persist in the future.
A harder problem of consciousness: reflections on a 50-year quest ... frontiersin.org 2 facts
claimAs an object nears the speed of light, time slows down, and at the speed of light, time stops, which suggests that light's motion alters time itself rather than simply moving through space.
claimThe author defines the 'Harder Problem of Consciousness' as the effort to explain space and time in order to securely position the elements needed to describe the Hard Problem of Consciousness, which is characterized as the alchemy of qualia.
Moving Forward on the Problem of Consciousness - David Chalmers consc.net 2 facts
claimDavid Chalmers argues that if conscious experience cannot be explained in terms of more basic entities, it must be considered irreducible, similar to the fundamental categories of space and time.
claimDavid Chalmers notes that the evidence used by physicists to introduce the fundamental categories of space and time is spatiotemporal in nature, just as the evidence for experience is experiential in nature.
Consciousness (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 ... plato.stanford.edu 2 facts
claimImmanuel Kant (1787), Edmund Husserl (1913), and subsequent phenomenologists demonstrated that the phenomenal structure of experience is intentional and includes complex representations of time, space, cause, body, self, and the world.
claimImmanuel Kant argued that phenomenal consciousness cannot be a mere succession of associated ideas, but must be the experience of a conscious self situated in an objective world structured by space, time, and causality.
Hallucinogens | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com 1 fact
claimHallucinogens produce changes in mood and affect, and can alter the perception of time, space, and self in ways that typically occur only during dreaming or religious exaltation.
The Conscious Mind - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 1 fact
perspectiveDavid Chalmers argues that consciousness is a fundamental law of nature because it is irreducible to lower-level facts, similar to space and time.
Theories and Methods of Consciousness biomedres.us 1 fact
quoteClassical physics is characterized by an unchanging structure of space and time based on unchangeable laws that account for reality, causality, continuity, and locality.
A new theoretical model proposes consciousness as the ... - Facebook facebook.com 1 fact
claimA new theoretical model proposes that consciousness is the fundamental basis of reality, existing prior to time, space, and matter.
Episode 2: The Hard Problem of Consciousness – David Chalmers ... futurepointdigital.substack.com 1 fact
claimDavid Chalmers suggests that consciousness might be a fundamental property of the universe, similar to space, time, or gravity.
A Survey on the Theory and Mechanism of Large Language Models arxiv.org 1 fact
referenceThe paper 'Language models represent space and time' (arXiv:2310.02207) is cited in the survey 'A Survey on the Theory and Mechanism of Large Language Models' regarding representation.
Quantum Theory of Consciousness - Scirp.org. scirp.org 1 fact
claimQuantum vibration, also referred to as a wave, is defined as a periodic oscillation extending over space and time, characterized by wavelength, frequency, and amplitude.
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2025 Edition) plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
claimSusan Schneider (2018) notes that in many popular approaches to quantum gravity, neither space nor time are considered fundamental entities.
Consciousness as the foundation: New theory addresses nature of ... phys.org 1 fact
referenceMaria Strømme's theoretical framework posits that consciousness is not a byproduct of brain activity, but rather a fundamental field underlying all experience, including matter, space, time, and life itself.
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu 1 fact
claimAlfred North Whitehead proposed a radical reform of the conception of the fundamental nature of the world, replacing the traditional triad of matter, space, and time with events and the ongoing processes of their creation and extinction.