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For decades, medicine has sold us the comforting “light switch” theory: under general anesthesia, we simply cease to exist for a few hours. But in Episode 54, we unpack Bruno Tonetto’s terrifying and fascinating 2026 paper, “Conscious Under Anesthesia,” which argues that we have confused the silence of the body with the absence of the mind.
We explore the “broken speaker” analogy, revealing how paralytics trap patients in a silent body, while premedications like Midazolam act as chemical memory wipers (anterograde amnesia) to ensure the experience is forgotten. The most chilling evidence? The Isolated Forearm Technique, where researchers block the paralytic from reaching one arm, revealing that up to a third of paralyzed, “unconscious” patients can squeeze a hand to answer complex questions—yet remember absolutely nothing upon waking.
Finally, we tackle the “Ketamine Paradox.” As an approved anesthetic that triggers hyper-vivid, mystical experiences, ketamine completely breaks the traditional “production model” of the brain. Instead, Tonetto argues for the “constraint model,” suggesting the brain is not a turbine generating consciousness, but a “reducing valve” filtering it. When ketamine unplugs the sensory inputs, the filter breaks, and the mind expands.
Reference:
Tonetto, B. (2026). Conscious under anesthesia: What the clinical evidence actually shows. Project: Return to Consciousness. https://brunoton.github.io/return-to-consciousness/exports/pdf/cua.pdf
The post Ketamine Proof of Consciousness appeared first on Talking Ketamine Podcast.
By Talking Ketamine4.3
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For decades, medicine has sold us the comforting “light switch” theory: under general anesthesia, we simply cease to exist for a few hours. But in Episode 54, we unpack Bruno Tonetto’s terrifying and fascinating 2026 paper, “Conscious Under Anesthesia,” which argues that we have confused the silence of the body with the absence of the mind.
We explore the “broken speaker” analogy, revealing how paralytics trap patients in a silent body, while premedications like Midazolam act as chemical memory wipers (anterograde amnesia) to ensure the experience is forgotten. The most chilling evidence? The Isolated Forearm Technique, where researchers block the paralytic from reaching one arm, revealing that up to a third of paralyzed, “unconscious” patients can squeeze a hand to answer complex questions—yet remember absolutely nothing upon waking.
Finally, we tackle the “Ketamine Paradox.” As an approved anesthetic that triggers hyper-vivid, mystical experiences, ketamine completely breaks the traditional “production model” of the brain. Instead, Tonetto argues for the “constraint model,” suggesting the brain is not a turbine generating consciousness, but a “reducing valve” filtering it. When ketamine unplugs the sensory inputs, the filter breaks, and the mind expands.
Reference:
Tonetto, B. (2026). Conscious under anesthesia: What the clinical evidence actually shows. Project: Return to Consciousness. https://brunoton.github.io/return-to-consciousness/exports/pdf/cua.pdf
The post Ketamine Proof of Consciousness appeared first on Talking Ketamine Podcast.

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