You are sitting in a room, looking at a tree through a window. The tree appears vivid, immediate, real. You have always assumed that this appearance is some version of what is actually there - filtered, perhaps,
or distorted, but fundamentally a representation of the physical world outside the glass.
This book argues that assumption is wrong.
The colour red does not exist, attenuated, in electromagnetic radiation at 700 nanometers. It does not exist there at all. Remove every perceiving organism from the universe and the radiation remains - but the redness is gone. Not hidden. Not inaccessible. Gone. The same is true of every quality that makes up conscious experience: warmth, solidity, sound, the passage of time. None of them are properties of the physical world. All of them are outputs of a translation process so complete that nothing in the output shares a common format with what went in.
This is what a codec does. A film stored as binary data on a hard drive bears no resemblance to the images, sound, and emotional resonance that emerge when it plays. The ones and zeros don't look like anything. They don't sound like anything. The codec makes something from them that is categorically different from what it was made of. The Codec proposes that biological perception works the same way - not as an analogy, but as a precise structural description of what the relationship between physical reality and conscious experience actually is.
Moving across four parts, the book builds this framework carefully and traces where it leads:
Part One: The Problem with the Window - follows the science and philosophy of perception from naïve realism through Helmholtz, Kant,
Donald Hoffman's Interface Theory, and predictive processing to the precise point where the standard accounts break down.
Part Two: The Codec - develops the Codec Framework: what it means for perception to be a categorical translation rather than a representation,
why the concept of accuracy cannot apply across the translation boundary,
and what this implies for the nature of colour, sound, time, and all of conscious experience.
Part Three: The Kernel - argues that the physical substrate generating conscious experience is not merely unknown but structurally inaccessible - and that this conclusion follows necessarily from the framework, independently of any mysticism or scepticism about science.
Part Four: What Follows - extends the framework to dreams,
artificial intelligence, the constructed self, the limits of language,
and the nature of awe - asking what it means to live well inside a rendered world you cannot step outside of.
Drawing on neuroscience, philosophy of mind, evolutionary biology,
and the structure of computation, The Codec is written for anyone who has ever sat still long enough to find ordinary perception strange - and wanted to follow that strangeness somewhere rigorous and true.
""Understanding the redness as a production makes it more interesting rather than less.""