The Inverse Consciousness–Time Theory: A Philosophical and Cognitive Framework for Subjective Time Perception
Description
This work introduces the Inverse Consciousness–Time Theory, a philosophical and cognitive model explaining how subjective time is internally generated by human awareness. The theory proposes that the perceived speed of time is inversely proportional to the level of consciousness directed toward the present moment. High awareness stretches time by increasing perceptual resolution and temporal encoding. Medium awareness accelerates subjective time due to reduced temporal monitoring. Near-zero awareness, such as during deep sleep or unconscious states, eliminates the experience of time entirely.
The expanded edition includes detailed analysis of cognitive mechanisms, perceptual framing, attentional load, and memory-density effects that shape human time perception. It explores phenomenological distortions such as time expansion during stress, temporal compression during enjoyment, and the complete absence of time during sleep. The theory also draws a conceptual parallel with quantum measurement, suggesting that awareness “collapses” potential experience into a continuous temporal structure.
This work aims to bridge philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and phenomenology to provide a unified understanding of how humans construct internal time rather than passively experiencing external chronological flow.
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Expanded structure and explanations
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Improved flow and clarity of the core proposition
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Added refined mathematical representation
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Added quantum observation analogy
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General polishing and text refinement
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Inverse_Consciousness_Time_Theory_FIXED (2).pdf
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Additional details
References
- Libet, B. Mind Time | Eagleman, D. The Brain and Time Perception | Husserl, E. Phenomenology of Internal Time