Integrated Information Theory

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Integrated Information Theory (IIT) is a mathematical theory of consciousness developed by Giulio Tononi and colleagues. It proposes that consciousness corresponds to integrated information — a quantity ($\Phi$, phi) measuring how much information a system generates as a whole beyond the information generated by its parts considered independently.

DOCUMENTEDEpistemic statuscategory
MethodsDocumented within mainstream physics / neuroscience / philosophy of mind as a recognised (often minority) research programme; cluster extensions add interpretive layers beyond documented portion.
FalsifierCore formalism shown to be internally inconsistent or empirically contradicted by pre-registered measurement.
Confidencemedium
Last reviewed2026-05-12

Core Claims

IIT operationalises consciousness in terms of five axioms (existence, composition, information, integration, exclusion) and corresponding postulates about physical substrates. From these it derives:

  • A quantitative measure $\Phi$ assigning a non-negative real value to any candidate conscious system.
  • A qualitative geometry (the conceptual structure / "qualia space") characterising the content of consciousness.
  • A substrate-independence claim: any physical system with sufficient $\Phi$ would be conscious, regardless of its material composition.

Mainstream Status

IIT is a serious, peer-reviewed scientific theory. It is one of the leading neuroscientific theories of consciousness, alongside Global Workspace Theory and Higher-Order Theories. It is not without critics — in 2023 a letter signed by 124 researchers characterised aspects of IIT as pseudoscientific, prompting substantial controversy and response.

The theory's status as a mainstream scientific programme is established; its correctness is contested within mainstream discourse.

Cluster Engagement

The Cosmic Codex cluster engages IIT for several reasons:

  • Substrate-independence. If consciousness is determined by information integration rather than substrate, this opens the conceptual space for non-local consciousness phenomena.
  • Quantitative measure. $\Phi$ provides a candidate metric for cluster claims about collective consciousness events — though the cluster's typical extensions go beyond what the theory licenses.
  • Panpsychism-adjacency. IIT licenses (in some interpretations) a graded panpsychism, which overlaps cluster cosmological commitments.

The cluster posture is to use IIT carefully. IIT does not entail Holographic Resonance, Consciousness-Driven Causality, or Channeling; it is a separately-engageable framework that some cluster syntheses cite as supporting infrastructure.

Cluster Connections

Quality-of-Engagement Discriminators

  • Theory vs cluster extension. IIT does not imply specific cluster claims; citing IIT does not transfer its credibility to those claims.
  • Computability of $\Phi$. Exact $\Phi$ is computationally intractable for realistic systems; published "$\Phi$ values" use approximations whose accuracy is itself contested.
  • Empirical predictions. IIT predicts that the posterior hot zone of cortex is the primary substrate of consciousness; this is empirically testable and ongoing.