Emotional sentience and the nature of phenomenal experience
Katherine Peil Kauffman
a, b, c, *
a
EFS International,12626 NE 114th Place Kirkland, WA 98033, USA
b
Harvard Divinity School, 45 Francis Ave, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
c
Northeastern University, 360 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA
article info
Article history:
Available online xxx
abstract
When phenomenal experience is examined through the lens of physics, several conundrums come to
light including: Specificity of mindebody interactions, feelings of free will in a deterministic universe,
and the relativity of subjective perception. The new biology of “emotion” can shed direct light upon these
issues, via a broadened categorical definition that includes both affective feelings and their coupled (yet
often subconscious) hedonic motivations. In this new view, evaluative (good/bad) feelings that trigger
approach/avoid behaviors emerged with life itself, a crude stimulus-response information loop between
organism and its environment, a semiotic signaling system embodying the first crude form of “mind”.
Emotion serves the ancient function of sensory-motor self-regulation and affords organisms e at every
level of complexity e an active, adaptive, role in evolution. A careful examination of the biophysics
involved in emotional “self-regulatory” signaling, however, acknowledges constituents that are incom-
patible with classical physics. This requires a further investigation, proposed herein, of the fundamental
nature of “the self” as the subjective observer central to the measurement process in quantum me-
chanics, and ultimately as an active, unified, self-awareness with a centrally creative role in “self-orga-
nizing” processes and physical forces of the classical world. In this deeper investigation, a new
phenomenological dualism is proposed: The flow of complex human experience is instantiated by both a
classically embodied mind and a deeper form of quantum consciousness that is inherent in the universe
itself, implying much deeper e more Whiteheadian e interpretations of the “self-regulatory” and “self-
relevant” nature of emotional stimulus. A broad stroke, speculative, intuitive sketch of this new territory
is then set forth, loosely mapped to several theoretical models of consciousness, potentially relevant
mathematical devices and pertinent philosophical themes, in an attempt to acknowledge the myriad
questions e and limitations e implicit in the quest to understand “sentience” in any ontologically
pansentient universe.
© 2015 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 00
2. The missing component of emotion .................................................... ............................................. 00
3. The new phenomenological duality: embodied mind and quantum consciousness ......................................................... 00
3.1. A pansentient universe? ...................................................................................................... 00
3.2. Pertinent theorists and maths ................................................................................................. 00
3.3. Pertinent philosophical, psychological, and phenomenological thought ............................................................. 00
4. Conclusion ........................................................................................................................ 00
Uncited reference ............................................................. .................................................... 00
Acknowledgments ................................................................................................................. 00
References ........................................................................................................................ 00
* EFS International,12626 NE 114th Place Kirkland, WA 98033, USA.
E-mail address: ktpeil@comcast.net.
Contents lists available at ScienceDirect
Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology
journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/pbiomolbio
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2015.08.003
0079-6107/© 2015 Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology xxx (2015) 1e18
Please cite this article inpress as: Kauffman, K.P., Emotional sentience and the nature of phenomenal experience, Progress in Biophysics and
Molecular Biology (2015), http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pbiomolbio.2015.08.003