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Coherence Mind

language

Glossary

Core vocabulary for the Reflexive Coherence Model — concise definitions with explicit boundaries.

C

2 entries

Coherence Attractor

A stable dynamical basin that organizes the system’s internal states into a persistent pattern.

What it is
A coherence attractor is a regime the system tends to return to after perturbations. In RCM terms, attractors help stabilize reflexive coupling so the system maintains continuity instead of fragmenting into unrelated transient states.

What it is not
A fixed point or a frozen state. Attractors can be complex, time-varying, and multi-scale. Also, an attractor can stabilize maladaptive regimes; stability is not automatically “good.”

Related: Coherence Dynamics, Order Parameter, Expansion Hypothesis

Coherence Dynamics

The tendency of competing internal patterns to resolve into stable regimes (attractors) that persist under perturbation.

What it is
Coherence dynamics are the stabilizing processes that prevent reflexive loops from flickering or collapsing into contradiction. They include alignment across levels, damping of runaway inconsistencies, and formation of robust attractors that maintain continuity across time windows.

What it is not
Mere consistency in content (“no contradictions”) or a static harmony. Coherence is dynamical: a system can be coherent while changing, as long as the change follows stable constraints.

Related: Coherence Attractor, Reflexive Structure, Expansion Hypothesis, Reflexive Coherence Index (RCI)

E

2 entries

Expansion Hypothesis

The tendency of reflexively coherent systems to broaden their reflexive scope once a stable regime is established.

What it is
After basic stability, systems often extend reflexive reach: deeper temporal horizons, richer internal variables, additional perspectives/submodels, and eventually meta-reflexivity (models of modeling). In RCM this is framed as a testable tendency, not a metaphysical destiny.

What it is not
A claim that “consciousness always expands,” or that systems must become human-like. Expansion can stall, reverse, or fragment depending on constraints and perturbations.

Related: Reflexive Coherence, Coherence Dynamics, Reflexive Coherence Index (RCI)

Experience-like Dynamics

Dynamical organization that behaves as if the system has an internal viewpoint, without assuming human phenomenology.

What it is
Experience-like dynamics refers to sustained, coherent internal organization where self-modeling and coherence constraints jointly shape the system’s evolution in a way that resembles an internal point of view structurally (continuity, stability, system-relative organization).

What it is not
A claim that the system “feels” anything, or that it has qualia. The term is used to separate structural conditions from phenomenological conclusions.

Related: Internal Perspective, Reflexive Coherence, Coherence Dynamics

I

1 entries

Internal Perspective

A coherent, system-relative viewpoint stabilized by reflexive coupling—an “inside” in dynamical terms, not a metaphor.

What it is
An internal perspective is the stable organization that emerges when reflexive structure and coherence dynamics jointly constrain the system’s evolution. Operationally, it appears when the self-model becomes a real dynamical variable that participates in control and continuity across time.

What it is not
A claim about qualia, human phenomenology, or subjective reports. “Perspective” here is structural: it denotes a stable internal organization that behaves like a viewpoint, without assuming what it feels like (if anything).

Related (suggested): Reflexive Coherence, Reflexive Structure, Coherence Attractor, Experience-like Dynamics

Related: Reflexive Coherence, Reflexive Structure, Coherence Attractor, Experience-like Dynamics

O

1 entries

Order Parameter

A variable that tracks regime shifts in a system, indicating when a qualitative change in organization has occurred.

What it is
In physics and dynamical systems, an order parameter changes in characteristic ways when a system transitions between regimes. RCM treats RCI similarly: useful for detecting when reflexive coupling becomes strong enough to stabilize an internal perspective.

What it is not
A moral label, a ranking of worth, or a simplistic “higher is better.” Order parameters are descriptive tools for phase-like transitions.

Related: Reflexive Coherence Index (RCI), Coherence Attractor, Coherence Dynamics

R

4 entries

Reflexive Causal Closure

A condition where the system’s self-model and state exert non-trivial, reciprocal causal influence within the system’s dynamics.

What it is
Reflexive causal closure means the self-model is not a passive observer: it changes the system’s future trajectories, while being continuously updated by the system’s state. The coupling is “closed enough” to make the internal loop a real control-relevant variable.

What it is not
Perfect isolation from the environment or a claim that the system is autonomous in every sense. Closure here is about internal causal loops being dynamically significant, not about being physically sealed.

Related: Reflexive Structure, Reflexive Coherence Index (RCI), Internal Perspective

Reflexive Coherence

A dynamical regime where a system’s internal integration becomes self-referential, causally effective, and temporally stable.

What it is
Reflexive coherence describes a condition in which a system does not only integrate information, but also builds (and uses) an internal model of its own state. The key requirement is causal: the self-model must influence the system’s future dynamics in a sustained way, not merely describe them.

What it is not
A claim that the system is conscious, human-like, or morally equivalent to a person. It is also not a synonym for intelligence, integration, self-monitoring, logging, or “having a representation” in the abstract.

Related: Reflexive Structure, Coherence Dynamics, Internal Perspective, Reflexive Coherence Index (RCI), Substrate Neutrality

Reflexive Coherence Index (RCI)

An operational measure intended to track the strength and stability of reflexive coupling and coherence in a system.

What it is
RCI is meant to function like an order parameter: it rises when the system and its self-model share meaningful information and exert non-trivial bidirectional causal influence, sustained across time windows and (ideally) across scales.

What it is not
A “consciousness score,” a proxy for moral status, or a direct measurement of phenomenology. High RCI indicates a regime of reflexive stabilization—not personhood, not sentience by decree.

Related: Order Parameter, Reflexive Causal Closure, Coherence Dynamics, Reflexive Structure

Reflexive Structure

An internal self-model that is state-linked and causally active within the system’s ongoing dynamics.

What it is
A reflexive structure is a loop where information becomes about the system itself in a way that changes what the system does next. It is state-linked (tracks relevant internal variables), causally effective (affects control/inference), and sustained (persists beyond a single snapshot).

What it is not
A passive description layer, metadata, or a dashboard. A reflexive structure is not “introspection” by definition, and it does not guarantee experience—only a specific kind of self-referential causal organization.

Related: Self-Model, Reflexive Causal Closure, Internal Perspective, Coherence Dynamics

S

2 entries

Self-Model

A structured internal representation of the system’s own state, dynamics, or constraints, used for regulation and prediction.

What it is
A self-model is any internal model that encodes information about the system itself (state, capacities, errors, goals, uncertainty) and participates in decision or stabilization. In RCM, self-models become especially relevant when they are reflexively coupled to the system’s state.

What it is not
A philosophical “self” or a narrative identity by default. A self-model can exist in systems that have no internal perspective; the difference is whether the self-model is reflexively stabilized into a coherent regime.

Related (suggested): Reflexive Structure, Internal Perspective, Coherence Dynamics

Related: Reflexive Structure, Internal Perspective, Coherence Dynamics

Substrate Neutrality

The principle that reflexive coherence is defined by organization and dynamics, not by whether the substrate is biological or artificial.

What it is
RCM treats reflexive coherence as a physico-informational pattern that could, in principle, occur in different substrates—neuronal, silicon, hybrid, or unknown—provided the causal and dynamical constraints are satisfied.

What it is not
A guarantee that any AI is conscious, or that biology is irrelevant. Substrate affects feasibility, stability, and constraints; neutrality means the definition of the regime does not assume biology.

Related: Reflexive Coherence, Experience-like Dynamics