Consciousness isn't a product of the brain but a fundamental property of reality that the brain tunes into. This paradigm shift, moving from a ‘generator’ to a ‘receiver’ model, is gaining traction in neuroscience, fueled by psychedelic research and studies on plant sentience.
Michael Pollan, on *The Ezra Klein Show*, argues that sentience is a baseline for all life. Experiments showing plants like *Mimosa pudica* can be anesthetized with xenon gas imply an internal state to suspend, challenging the idea that consciousness requires a complex nervous system. This view aligns with researchers like Christof Koch, who now advocate for panpsychism or idealism - the theory that consciousness is a universal field.
Michael Pollan, The Ezra Klein Show:
- If it is like anything to be a creature, that creature then is conscious.
- The fact that plants have two states of being is a very pregnant idea.
Parallel evidence from developmental biology shows core aspects of identity are biologically predetermined long before conscious choice. On *Huberman Lab*, Dr. Marc Breedlove detailed the fraternal birth order effect, where each older brother increases a male's likelihood of being gay by 33%, a result of maternal immune responses altering prenatal hormone exposure. Physical markers like the 2D:4D finger ratio and otoacoustic emissions further cement orientation as a biological script written in the womb.
The convergence is striking: studies of plants point to a universal consciousness, while human developmental biology shows our most personal traits are set before birth. Both threads undermine the idea of the conscious self as a sovereign author. Instead, the brain appears to be a filter - editing a vast broadcast for survival, as Aldous Huxley proposed, with the ego acting as a barrier, not a source.
Marc Breedlove, Huberman Lab:
- The larger the number of older brothers that a male has, the higher the probability that he is gay.
- It's been seen over and over.
This isn't just academic. The ‘receiver’ theory, often experienced directly during psychedelic states, suggests modern life's constant focus narrows our consciousness. Cultivating a ‘don't know mind,’ as Zen teacher Joan Halifax practices, might be necessary to access a wider, more awe-filled reality that our biology normally filters out.

