Symbolic Artwork Concept
A symbolic artwork combining Gilgamesh, Enkidu, ancient Sumerian clay tablets, a star-filled cosmos, quantum wave patterns, and luminous forms representing human consciousness.
Preamble
Throughout human history, the deepest questions have always remained the same:
Who is the human being?
What is time?
Why does death trouble humanity?
How did memory and representation become civilization?
Is the human being the only creature capable of representing the future?
Is consciousness merely a biological function, or is it a symbolic process that transcends history and time?
This study examines these questions as a unified field of thought. It extends from ancient Sumerian clay tablets to modern AI-assisted textual reinterpretations and to Silo’s philosophy of consciousness known as the “Space of Representation.”
Historical Foundation of the Study
The earliest foundations of this study begin in the Sumerian civilization between 3500–2000 BCE.
For the first time in human history:
memory was recorded on clay
time became history
power was transformed into myth
fear of death became literature
humanity began reflecting on its own future
It was in this stage that the Epic of Gilgamesh emerged.
Gilgamesh is considered one of humanity’s earliest existential documents. It is not merely the story of a king, but rather:
“The first great literary reflection of human consciousness confronting mortality.”
Silo’s Intellectual Contribution
In the twentieth century, Silo did not interpret myths as primitive superstition, but as historical structures of human consciousness.
Among the major concepts he developed are:
1. Space of Representation
The “Space of Representation” can be understood as an inner screen of consciousness. It is the internal space where the external world is reflected and organized within human awareness.
Thoughts, emotions, memories, and images operate within this field.
2. Deferred Response
Deferred Response refers to the uniquely human capacity to postpone an immediate reaction to a stimulus.
According to Silo, this ability allows human beings to regulate behavior consciously instead of responding through automatic reflexes.
3. Intentionality
Consciousness is never passive. It is always directed toward something.
Intentionality refers to the goal-oriented structure of consciousness and the inner purpose behind human action.
4. Historical Consciousness
Human beings are not only social beings but historical beings.
Historical consciousness is the capacity to learn from the past, understand the present historically, and project meaning into the future.
5. Mythic Structures
Human consciousness understands reality through deep symbolic narratives and myths.
Myths are not merely stories; they are psychological structures representing humanity’s fears, desires, and existential tensions.
6. Humanization of Power
Power should not exist merely to dominate or suppress others.
For Silo, true power becomes humanized when it protects dignity, freedom, and nonviolence.
These concepts allow the Epic of Gilgamesh to be read in an entirely new way.
In Silo’s interpretation:
Gilgamesh is not merely a historical king
Enkidu is not merely a companion
the search for immortality is not merely physical survival
They represent stages in the evolution of human consciousness.
What is Silo’s “Gilgamesh”?
Silo did not produce an academic translation of Gilgamesh.
What he created was a mythic reinterpretation.
1. Not a Historical Reconstruction
The purpose is not simply to reconstruct factual historical events.
Rather than treating myth as a museum artifact, Silo examines how myth continues to live within human consciousness today.
2. Not Merely a Philological Translation
This is not simply the academic act of translating words from one language into another.
The emphasis lies not on linguistic accuracy alone, but on the inner images and symbolic experiences awakened by the text.
3. Existential-Symbolic Rewriting
This is the core of Silo’s approach.
Existential
The myth becomes a reflection of humanity confronting meaning, death, fear, suffering, and transcendence.
The hero’s crisis becomes the crisis of every human being.
Symbolic
Characters and events are understood as symbols operating within the Space of Representation.
Rewriting
Ancient myths are reinterpreted in ways that can contribute to contemporary human internal liberation.
Gilgamesh in “Universal Root Myths”
In Universal Root Myths, Silo structures the Gilgamesh cycle into symbolic stages representing the development of consciousness.
വിഭാഗം
പ്രതീകാത്മക അർത്ഥം
Gilgamesh and the Creation of His Double
Self and Other
The Cedar Forest
Heroic Confrontation
The Celestial Bull
Cosmic Punishment and Desire
Death of Enkidu
Mortality Shock
Descent to the Hells
Inner Abyss
Universal Flood
Civilizational Reset
Return
Transformation
Traditional Assyriology and Psychological Reading
This is not a traditional Assyriological reading.
It is fundamentally a psychological and phenomenological interpretation.
Enkidu: “Humanization Through the Other”
In Silo’s reinterpretation, Enkidu is not merely a friend.
He represents:
the “double”
alterity
mirrored humanity
In Silo’s psychological vision, the human being is not a self-enclosed entity isolated within itself. The human “Self” becomes humanized through relationship, encounter, and experience with the Other.
At the beginning of the epic, Gilgamesh symbolizes isolated power.
However, with the arrival of Enkidu, new dimensions emerge:
Empathy
Fraternity
Awareness of limitation
Awareness of mortality
New AI-Assisted Sumerian Readings
In the twenty-first century, Sumerian-Akkadian clay tablets are being reread and reinterpreted through Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, and Neural Translation Systems.
This new field of research:
reconnects fragmented tablets
reconstructs missing lines
identifies scribal variations
traces mythic evolution
compares textual patterns
Through this, scholars increasingly recognize that:
“Gilgamesh is not a fixed text; it is a living tradition of human consciousness evolving across centuries.”
Here, AI is not merely a technological instrument. It is becoming a system capable of reactivating humanity’s oldest symbolic memory.
What Are Myths?
Silo did not regard myths as primitive superstitions.
According to him:
“Myths are historical psychic landscapes.”
In other words, myths encode and represent:
collective anxiety
temporal consciousness
civilizational tensions
existential structures
Gilgamesh stands as one of the deepest and most powerful examples of this process.
“Death of Enkidu” — The Birth of Temporal Consciousness
In Silo’s interpretation, the death of Enkidu is not merely a literal tragedy.
It represents:
“The emergence of temporal consciousness.”
For the first time, Gilgamesh imagines his own future death.
At this moment, a new condition of consciousness emerges.
From here begin:
deferred response
existential projection
future-oriented suffering
“Space of Representation” and Gilgamesh
Viewed through Silo’s theory of the “Space of Representation,” Gilgamesh’s journey is not merely a physical expedition.
It becomes:
a symbolic inner journey
a reorganization of internal images
a confrontation with finitude
AI and Scribal Layers
Today, Artificial Intelligence assists scholars in:
comparing different tablet variants
detecting scribal insertions
reconstructing missing lines
tracing linguistic evolution
These discoveries increasingly demonstrate that:
“Gilgamesh is not the fixed work of a single author.”
Rather, it is:
“A centuries-long accumulation of consciousness.”
Such findings remarkably reinforce Silo’s mythic-historical interpretation.
Conclusion: The Evolution of Human Consciousness
The central insight of this comparative study is that:
The true evolution of humanity is not purely biological.
Rather, it is:
representational evolution
temporal evolution
symbolic evolution
intentional evolution
From Gilgamesh to AI, human history has continuously struggled:
to understand death
to represent time
to transform memory into history
to transform suffering into meaning
to make the future live within the present
Perhaps the rarest phenomenon in the universe is not advanced technology.
Rather, it may be:
“A consciousness capable of deferring reaction, integrating time, humanizing power, and representing the future.”
Based on the writings of Silo.