We often assume only humans are aware, but what if plants and nature share that experience? Explore why consciousness might be a property of all life.

Consciousness isn't an 'accident'—it’s the 'deep grammar' of everything that lasts. It is the universe’s refusal to vanish, the point where the ancient drive to persist finally develops the eyes to see itself and the voice to speak its own name.
Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco
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Criado por ex-alunos da Universidade de Columbia em San Francisco

Lena: Miles, I was staring at my houseplants this morning—you know, the ones I usually forget to water—and I had this sudden, slightly trippy thought. What if they’re actually aware of me? Like, is there a "someone" inside that fern?
Miles: It’s funny you say that, because we usually assume consciousness is this exclusive club for humans with big, complex brains. But what if that’s just our own "internal noise" talking? There’s this fascinating idea Michael Pollan explores in his new book, *A World Appears*, that challenges that exact assumption.
Lena: Right, because we tend to think if it doesn't have a cortex, it isn't "thinking." But didn't some researchers find that even a Venus flytrap can be put under anesthesia?
Miles: Exactly. When exposed to xenon gas, they stop responding to flies entirely. It raises what philosophers call "the hard problem": how does matter—whether it's three pounds of brain tissue or a leafy vine—become subjective experience?
Lena: So, it might not be about having a brain, but about being alive. Let’s explore how consciousness might be a fundamental property of the entire world around us.