
The Gospel of Thomas Predates Gnosticism
November 6, 2025
ChatGPT, Show Me Nothing
November 7, 2025John the Baptist is often remembered for his fiery message of repentance, his eccentric appearance, and his solitary life in the wilderness. Yet, to reduce him to a mere ascetic with a grim sermon is to miss the profound and revolutionary nature of his true role. John was not just a messenger with a particular message; he was a herald, and the power of his voice lay not in the specifics of what he said, but in the radical newness of the very sound he made. It was the sound of a pivot, a bridge, and a seismic event, a voice that declared a new chapter had not just begun, but was already breaking forth into the world.
To the people of his time, accustomed to the familiar cadence of prophets long past and the monotonous drone of religious formalism, John’s voice was an abrupt and startling intrusion. It was not the polished, scholarly discourse of the temple scribes, nor was it the gentle, poetic whisper of a psalmist. Instead, it was raw and urgent, a sound born of the desert itself.
Donald Hoffman is the modern-day John the Baptist, the messenger of something new. Donald Hoffman’s theory, often called Conscious Realism, proposes that consciousness is fundamental and that the physical world, as we perceive it, is an interface created by conscious agents, not a true representation of reality. He argues that our senses don’t reveal objective reality but instead provide a simplified, species-specific “user interface” to guide behavior. This interface, like a computer desktop, helps us navigate the world without needing to understand its true, complex nature.
To draw a parallel between John the Baptist and Don Hoffman, one can focus on how both figures challenge the conventional understanding of reality and perception, and how they both act as a “pointer” to something more fundamental. Don Hoffman’s work in cognitive science challenges the traditional view that our perceptions accurately reflect an objective, external reality.
For Hoffman, our common-sense reality is not the fundamental truth. The key similarity lies in their function as a pointer. John the Baptist points away from himself and the existing religious order, directing people’s attention to a deeper, more fundamental reality that is about to emerge. He is the herald of a new way of being.
Donald Hoffman’s theories, particularly his Interface Theory of Perception (ITP) and Conscious Realism, are highly debated. The main arguments used to challenge his views can be grouped into several key areas:
1. Criticisms of the Fitness Beats Truth (FBT) Theorem and Evolutionary Argument
Hoffman’s core argument rests on his mathematical Fitness Beats Truth Theorem (FBT), which states that natural selection will almost always favor perceptions tuned to fitness (survival and reproduction) over those tuned to truth (accurate representation of objective reality). Critics argue:
- Self-Refutation/Circular Reasoning: The theory relies on the validity of the Theory of Evolution, which itself is a scientific theory about an objective world (spacetime, physical objects, etc.). If our perceptions and cognitive faculties are entirely non-veridical (not truth-tracking), then why should we trust the very faculties (reason, mathematics, logic) that allowed Hoffman to formulate the FBT theorem and evolutionary theory in the first place?
- Veridicality is Necessary for Survival: Critics argue that for organisms to successfully navigate and survive in a dangerous, objective world (e.g., avoiding a cliff, catching prey), their perceptions must be at least sufficiently accurate, or veridical, about certain objective features of reality, even if they aren’t fully complete. Total non-veridicality seems incompatible with long-term survival.
- Overstated Conclusions: Some critics suggest that Hoffman and his colleagues may have overstated what the FBT modeling actually proves. It may show that fitness beats absolute truth most of the time in certain simulated conditions, but not that veridical perceptions are universally selected against, nor that an organism seeing none of reality is better off than one seeing some reality.
- 2. Issues with the Interface Theory of Perception (ITP) Metaphor
Hoffman uses the computer desktop interface (icons) as a metaphor for our reality. Critics challenge this:
- The Problem of Scientific Instruments and Agreement: Science, which operates on the assumption of an objective reality, has produced instruments (telescopes, microscopes, particle accelerators) that extend and refine our senses, consistently revealing a reality far beyond human perception (e.g., atoms, distant galaxies). The data from these non-evolved instruments agrees with the models of an objective spacetime, which challenges the idea that spacetime is a purely subjective, species-specific “desktop.”
- The Utility of Shared Perception: The fact that humans can reliably communicate about and successfully interact with the world (e.g., catching a ball, driving a car, building a house) suggests a high degree of correlation between our individual “interfaces” and a shared, objective structure. If the icons bore no resemblance to reality, such widespread and complex interaction would be difficult to explain.
- Mimicry as a Counterexample: The phenomenon of biological mimicry (e.g., a non-poisonous snake evolving to look like a poisonous one) seems to require that the predator perceives some veridical aspects of the object (shape, color pattern) for the deception to be an effective survival strategy.
3. Philosophical Objections to Conscious Realism
Hoffman’s ultimate conclusion, Conscious Realism—that conscious agents are the fundamental building blocks of reality, and spacetime/objects are mere manifestations of their dynamics—faces classic philosophical challenges:
- Self-Undermining Claims: Similar to the FBT argument, the theory proposes a profound truth about “objective reality” (that it is fundamentally consciousness), but if our cognitive faculties are just fitness-driven “icons,” how can we trust their ability to arrive at this deep truth?
- Lack of Explanatory Power (in its current stage): Critics argue that while the theory suggests a mathematical model of conscious agents, it often fails to clearly explain or predict specific features of our subjective experience or the physical world. It’s sometimes characterized as a form of speculative metaphysics (or a variant of Idealism) that lacks empirical testability.
- The Emergence Problem: Hoffman is trying to solve the “Hard Problem of Consciousness” (how matter gives rise to experience) by inverting it. However, the theory still faces a challenge in explaining how individual, simple “conscious agents” combine to form the complex, unified human consciousness and the apparently structured physical world we perceive.
In summary, the refutations center on the perceived self-undermining nature of the evolutionary argument, the challenge of explaining scientific and intersubjective agreement if perception is entirely illusory, and the speculative nature of the ultimate metaphysical conclusion (Conscious Realism).
Copyright © 2025 “This blog emerged through a dialogue between human reflection and multiple AI systems, each contributing fragments of language and perspective that were woven into the whole.”


