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Irreducible: Consciousness, Life, Computers, and Human Nature Paperback – June 1, 2024


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Federico Faggin is one of the greatest luminaries of high technology alive today. A physicist by education, he is the inventor of the microprocessor and the MOS silicon gate technology, both of which underlie the modern world's entire information technology. With the knowledge and experience of a lifetime in cutting-edge fields, Federico now turns his attention to consciousness and the nature of reality, sharing with us his profound insights on the classical and quantum worlds, artificial intelligence, life and the human mind. In this book, he elaborates on an idealist model of reality, produced after years of careful thought and direct experience, according to which nature's most fundamental level is that of consciousness as a quantum phenomenon, while the classical physical world consists merely of evocative symbols of a deeper reality.
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Consciousness, life, the nature of life, meaning of life, computers, technology, human nature
Consciousness, life, the nature of life, meaning of life, computers, technology, human nature
Consciousness, life, the nature of life, meaning of life, computers, technology, human nature
Consciousness, life, the nature of life, meaning of life, computers, technology, human nature
Consciousness, life, the nature of life, meaning of life, computers, technology, human nature

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About the Author

Federico Faggin is a physicist, engineer, inventor, entrepreneur, and author. He developed the MOS Silicon Gate Technology at Fairchild and designed the world's first microprocessor at Intel. Faggin also founded and led Zilog and Synaptics before starting the Federico and Elvia Faggin Foundation dedicated to the scientific study of consciousness. He lives in Los Altos Hills, CA.

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Federico Faggin
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Born in Vicenza, Italy, Federico Faggin received a Laurea degree in Physics, summa cum laude, from the University of Padua in 1965. In 1968 he moved to Silicon Valley, California, where he now lives.

Throughout his career, Faggin has given life to several state-of-the-art products and technologies, either directly or through the several companies he founded and led. At the age of 19 he co-designed and built an experimental transistorized electronic computer at Olivetti, Italy (1961). While working for Fairchild Semiconductors, he developed the MOS Silicon Gate Technology (SGT) and designed the Fairchild 3708, the world’s first commercial IC (integrated circuit) with SGT (1968). The SGT gradually displaced the incumbent bipolar technology to be employed for nearly all ICs worldwide. It is still in use today.

Faggin joined Intel in 1970 where he designed the world’s first microprocessor, the Intel 4004 (1971), and led the development of all early Intel microprocessors. Distinguished among them are the Intel 8008 (1972) and Intel 8080 (1974). At the end of 1974 Faggin started and directed his first company, Zilog, Inc., entirely dedicated to the emergent microprocessor and microcontroller market. The Zilog Z80 microprocessor (1976), and the Z8 microcontroller (1978) are still in volume production in 2020.

Faggin founded and directed Cygnet Technologies, Inc. (1982), a company that in 1984 introduced a pioneering personal communication product for voice, data, and electronic mail. He then founded and directed Synaptics, Inc. (1986) that initially developed experimental analog chips for the emulation of artificial neural network and then pioneered the Touchpad (1994) and the Touchscreen (1999), solutions that have revolutionized the way we interface with mobile devices. Today Synaptics is the world leader in human interface solutions. During the period 1999-2009, Faggin was Chairman of Synaptics and was also CEO of Foveon, Inc., the developer of advanced image sensors and digital cameras for mobile devices, during 2003-2008.

Faggin is currently president of Federico and Elvia Faggin Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to the scientific study of consciousness, an interest that has become a passionate full-time activity.

Federico Faggin has received many prizes and awards in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Distinguished among them are the Marconi Prize (1988), the Kyoto Prize for Advanced Technology (1997), the Lifetime Achievement Award from the European Patent Organization (2006), and the National Medal of Technology and Innovation (2009), from President Barack Obama. In 1996, Faggin was inducted in the National Inventor's Hall of Fame. He has also received many honorary degrees in Computer Science and Electronic Engineering, including a PhD in Electronic Engineering from the Polytechnic University of Armenia (2012), a PhD in Science from Chapman University (2013), and a PhD in Electronic Engineering from the University of Pisa. Italy (2019).

In 2019, Faggin published his autobiography SILICIO, through Mondadori, Italy’s premier book publisher, where it has been a bestseller. His autobiography, SILICON: From the Invention of the Microprocessor to the New Science of Consciousness, is available in the US since February, 2021.

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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2024
    Federico Faggin designed the first Intel processor. Had an axis-shifting spiritual experience or revelation about the world beyond and the oneness of all things, which he describes in the beginning.

    He goes on to dismantle the current notions of computers eventually becoming conscious along with the reductionistic conflation of information with meaning; and the Claude Shannon model's inability to reckon with meaning or semantics.

    Breaks down the world into three levels of causation Consciousness / Information / Physical, in which the direction of causation runs in that same order. Which is comparable to the model in the paper "The Role of Quantum Mechanics in Cognition Based Evolution" which says levels of causation are Cognition / Code / Chemicals. Two Electrical Engineers clearly thinking alike.

    Faggin Defines Quantum Mechanics as a science that is really about the interiority of conscious experience (i.e. only the system can know its own quantum state), rather than the objective measurement of objects. He argues that this new framing can make QM comprehensible for the first time.

    Identifies evolution as the action of proactive conscious actors (not merely observers) in contrast to the now-obsolete Neo-Darwinian view.

    He calls a "unit of consciousness" a Seity. The concept is not all that different from a soul. In this beings are eternal. He speaks confidently and not hesitantly from his experiences with the beyond.

    He avoids "God" terminology. He talks about "the One".

    The book delivers a lot of great quotations and is a skillful integration of rigorous logic with spiritual and artistic insight.
    37 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2025
    Wow! I have been a consciousness junky for most of my life but this book breaks new ground. Science needs measurement data and an idea that subsumes the data into a broad pattern of explanation. For a well-known example look at how the theory of continental drift now explains how Africa and South America look like they could have fit together as if later moved apart. Wegner wrote up his hypothesis a long time ago but the scientists dismissed it as nonsense because nobody could explain how continents with their mountains could move apart. Because of that key problem, the idea was considered balderdash. Today scientists now understand how continental drift is not just a harebrained scheme, but is well explained so the original idea is correct. Today we are in the same situation with consciousness. I saw a book (title and author forgotten) where 50 different consciousness hypotheses are mentioned. Many of them seem to me to be as crazy as shifting continents but this one combines enough pieces to strike me as the best one! The author is a physicist and expert in computers and combines quantum waves with their "collapse of the wave" and "Entanglement" into an idea that includes elements of what is known as spiritual dimensions. Science does not accept the spiritual as having any practical value within science but Federico Faggin sees quantum waves as having the necessary structure to make a logical case for what I call the soul, he makes up some safe names that avoid conflating a science-based theory with accumulated thousands of years of philosophical jargon. Just as Wegener was ahead of the scientific curve and then was saved with new observational data, I see some places today where utterly unexplainable observations suddenly take on a new interpretative meaning and thus serve to strengthen this crazy idea for consciousness. Note that new observations that speak to the future necessarily seem initially crazy. Today we have a data set that meets that characteristic and hence could be a source of information that adds predictive substance to this idea of quantum waves as a unifying spiritual scheme. In physics the "spooky action at a distance" as Einstein put it has no current explanation except in the view offered by Faggin. Also the 90 years of accumulated data by psychiatrists at the University of Virginias Division of Percetual Studies on memories of little children concerning details of a lived life before they were born has the same style as continents fitting together. Today we cannot understand how children could remember a life that clearly did not occur before they were born but with the light of "Quantum Information-based Panpsychism, the accumulated descriptions of a past life take on a new dimension of possibility. His book might be hard to read for those with a very limited understanding of quantum mechanics but he works hard to make it all as understandable as possible. Hard-nosed scientists will find this a difficult pill to swallow but its well worth the effort. I call this book extremely important as do many other reviewers here.
    14 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2025
    I have a pretty good general familiarity with quantum physics and have read many books on the subject. Although it was a bit over my head at times, the book does a good job of blending the quantum with the conscious, and allowed me to have a better sense of what this combination is or could be like. I’d recommend this book to anyone who has an interest in these topics or spirituality generally.

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  • suba
    5.0 out of 5 stars Bon livre
    Reviewed in Canada on June 9, 2025
    Ce livre explique pourquoi nous compliquons notre vie. L'auteur explique comment il eut une expérience surnaturelle et il a essayé de comprendre quel est les sens de la vie.
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  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 30, 2025
    A fascinating read, as easy as the subject can be for the layman.
  • Fabio
    5.0 out of 5 stars Mindblowing. An integral theory of physics
    Reviewed in Brazil on September 21, 2024
    I hope this book becomes a bestseller and touches the minds and souls of those who read it. It must shake the cornerstones of what we call hard science today and point out new ways to understand the world, insights that have already been revealed by many sages before. I only wish Federico had mentioned Ken Wilber's integral theory at least once. However, I consider this book a foundation for an integral theory of physics, based on a novel approach to irreducible premises, notably conciousness and free will.
  • Sukhthave Singh
    5.0 out of 5 stars Quantum at its best
    Reviewed in Australia on October 31, 2024
    Best book for merging Vedanta and quantum science
  • Antu
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
    Reviewed in India on July 21, 2024
    An enthralling book which talks about the fundamental nature of reality in terms of CIP (consciousnes, information, physical). I'm already having good number of books on such topic yet this book added yet another angle to the topic. One must read it if he /she is interested in such topic.

    On a different note, the author seems to be an Ni-dom (as per Jungian cognitive function), most probably an INTJ.