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Joscha Bach delivers “The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis” at Future Day 2026

Can AI become conscious?

What is consciousness for? And is biological consciousness best understood as a self-organising algorithm that could, in principle, be recreated in machines?

In this talk, Joscha explores consciousness as perception of perception, coherence maintenance, modelling, resonance, self-organisation, and the possibility that machine consciousness may emerge through the right virtual architecture.

Essay: ‘The Machine Consciousness Hypothesis’ by Joscha Bach & Hikari Sorenson: https://cimc.ai/cimcHypothesis.pdf

CIMC: https://cimc.ai

Post: https://scifuture.org/joscha-bach-the… Intro

Do we really control our own decisions?

For decades, neuroscientists have explored a fascinating phenomenon in the human brain known as the split-brain experiment. When the connection between the two hemispheres of the brain — the Corpus Callosum — is surgically cut, something extraordinary happens.

Each hemisphere begins processing information independently.

In groundbreaking research conducted by neuroscientist Michael Gazzaniga, scientists discovered that the speaking side of the brain often creates explanations for actions it did not initiate. This phenomenon is known as the Left-Brain Interpreter.

Instead of admitting uncertainty, the brain rapidly constructs logical stories to explain behavior. These experiments revealed how the human mind continuously builds a coherent narrative about our identity, decisions, and sense of self.

The split-brain studies remain one of the most important discoveries in modern neuroscience, raising profound questions about consciousness, decision-making, and the nature of the human mind.

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Philip Kitcher — Philosophy of Reductionism & Emergence

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Can biology be explained entirely in terms of chemistry and then physics? If so, that’s “reductionism.” Or are there “emergent” properties at higher levels of the hierarchy of life that cannot be explained by properties at lower or more basic levels?

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Philip Stuart Kitcher is a British philosopher who is the John Dewey Professor Emeritus of philosophy at Columbia University. He specialises in the philosophy of science, the philosophy of biology, the philosophy of mathematics, and more recently pragmatism.

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Closer To Truth, hosted by Robert Lawrence Kuhn and directed by Peter Getzels, presents the world’s greatest thinkers exploring humanity’s deepest questions. Discover fundamental issues of existence. Engage new and diverse ways of thinking. Appreciate intense debates. Share your own opinions. Seek your own answers.

Cosmic Megafauna — Could Giant Alien Life Forms Exist?

Space is big—but could life out there be even bigger? Join us as we ask just how enormous alien life can get—and what it might look like.

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Credits:
Cosmic Megafauna — Could Giant Alien Life Forms Exist?
Episode 727; June 26, 2025
Written, Produced & Narrated by: Isaac Arthur.
Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images.
Music Courtesy of Epidemic Sound http://epidemicsound.com/creator.
Stellardrone, \

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Revolutionary single shot helps with healing after a heart attack

Researchers at Texas A&M University have developed a single-injection treatment to aid heart recovery after a heart attack. Following a myocardial infarction, the heart naturally releases atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), a hormone that reduces cardiac stress and limits long-term damage — but in insufficient quantities. To address this, the team leveraged self-amplifying RNA (saRNA) technology: a one-time intramuscular injection (administered with a standard syringe into the arm) temporarily instructs muscle cells to produce elevated levels of ANP, which then enters the bloodstream and reaches the heart over several weeks. In animal models, the treatment reduced scarring, preserved healthy heart muscle, improved pumping function, and lowered the risk of post-infarction complications. Compared to the team’s earlier approaches — such as surgically implanted cardiac patches — this method is far simpler and more practical, with the potential to meaningfully improve both clinical workflow and patient outcomes.


The new approach uses an injection that prompts the body to release a natural heart protective hormone for weeks.

Reversible one-way lipid transfer at ER–autophagosome membrane contact sites via Atg2

Li Hao, Kuninori Suzuki et al. (University of Tokyo 東京大学大学院新領域創成科学研究科) report that lipophilic dye octadecyl rhodamine B (R18) is transported to the ER mediated by membrane transfer proteins. During autophagy, ER-resident R18 is transferred to the autophagic membrane via Atg2. After termination, R18 is reversed back to the ER, showing that the direction of bridge-type lipid transfer is modulated by metabolic states.


Bridge-like lipid transfer proteins (LTPs) contain a repeating β-groove domain and long hydrophobic grooves that act as bridges at membrane contact sites (MCSs) to efficiently transfer lipids. Atg2 is one such bridge-like LTP essential for autophagosome formation, during which a newly synthesized isolation membrane (IM) emerges and expands through lipid supply. However, studies on Atg2-mediated lipid transfer are limited to in vitro studies due to the lack of a suitable probe for monitoring phospholipid dynamics in vivo. Here, we characterized the lipophilic dye octadecyl rhodamine B (R18), which internalizes and labels the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in a manner that requires flippases and oxysterol-binding protein–related proteins. Using R18, we demonstrated phospholipid transfer from the ER to the IM during autophagy in vivo. Upon autophagy termination, our data suggested the reversible phospholipid flow from the IM to the ER in response to environmental changes. Our findings highlight the critical role of bridge-like LTPs in MCS-mediated phospholipid homeostasis.

Morphological variation in the Rhododendron pseudochrysanthum Hayata (Ericales, Ericaceae) species complex from Taiwan

New research reveals that the Rhododendron pseudochrysanthum var. taitunense is a distinct subspecies, uniquely characterised by its glabrous leaves, larger seeds and specialised pollen morphology.

Found exclusively in the low-elevation mountains of Northern Taiwan, this rare taxon stands clearly apart from its close relatives within the species complex.

Read the full paper: doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.271.


Our study examines the morphological and statistical differentiation within the Rhododendron pseudochrysanthum species complex through comparative analyses of macro-and micro-morphological characters. Using significance testing and cluster analysis, our results demonstrate that R. pseudochrysanthum Hayata ssp. morii (Hayata) Yamazaki var. taitunense Yamazaki is distinct from other members of the complex, namely R. morii Hayata, R. pseudochrysanthum Hayata, and R. hyperythrum Hayata. This taxon is characterized by glabrous mature leaves with revolute margins, larger flower buds with an elongated conical shape, larger pollen and seed sizes, and distinct pollen and seed morphology. Furthermore, R. pseudochrysanthum ssp. morii var. taitunense exhibits a restricted and localized distribution, occurring exclusively in low-elevation mountainous areas of Northern Taiwan.

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