The Conscious Cosmos
A Philosophical Case for Cosmopsychism
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Is consciousness a late accident of evolution — or a fundamental feature of reality itself?
In The Conscious Cosmos, Clayton Louis Turnage presents a rigorous philosophical case for cosmopsychism: the view that the universe as a whole is the primary bearer of consciousness, and that individual minds are localized expressions within that unity.
Beginning with the hard problem of consciousness, the book examines why reductionist materialism struggles to explain subjective experience. It then evaluates panpsychism and its central difficulty—the combination problem—before proposing a bold inversion: perhaps unity is prior to multiplicity.
Drawing on contemporary philosophy of mind, metaphysics, quantum holism, and Integrated Information Theory, Turnage develops a systematic argument that the whole may be ontologically fundamental. Individual selves, on this view, are differentiated regions within a unified experiential reality.
This is not mysticism, theology, or speculative science fiction. It is a disciplined metaphysical investigation into the structure of consciousness and the nature of the cosmos.
If consciousness is irreducible, and if unity is primitive, the simplest explanation may be that reality is unified not only structurally — but experientially.