When the Body Becomes a Question
Consciousness always seeks support in the body. In every movement and every pain impulse it finds confirmation of its own existence. But what happens when this support becomes uncertain—or disappears altogether? This question is not merely philosophical. It emerges from the clinic, from hospital beds where the ordinary contract between mind and body has been broken. And it is precisely there—in the most extreme human conditions—that natural intelligence reveals its most astonishing quality: it does not surrender subjectivity. It reorganizes around it. If the human being is a functional transition between biological evolution and post-biological forms of intelligence, then the clinical cases explored here are not simply medical curiosities. They are windows into the plasticity of natural intelligence itself—its capacity to preserve an inner world even when the outer world of the body has radically changed. Locked-In Syndrome: Consciousness Without Response Locked-in syndrome is one o...