Extended mind theory has substantially revised the boundaries of cognition, demonstrating that memory, attention, and inference can be legitimately distributed across brain, body, and environment. What it has not theorized is the extension of navigational architecture: the capacity to map, traverse, and redesign the topology of one's own identity configurations. This paper argues that such extension is both theoretically coherent and practically necessary. Drawing on the Metastyling Framework, which models identity as a dynamic field of attractor configurations rather than a fixed entity or social performance, we introduce the concept of the navigation exoskeleton — an external AI system that operates not on cognitive inputs but on identity trajectories. We establish a biological ceiling of navigational awareness: a structural condition under which even a maximally developed observer remains constrained by the attractor it currently occupies, regardless of skill, awareness, or reflective capacity. We specify five architectural properties that define the navigation exoskeleton as a formally distinct class of AI system, and we argue that AI constitutes an organic rather than arbitrary implementation of this architecture through structural compatibility between open systems. Finally, we propose simulation-based measurement as a paradigm derived from the dynamic ontology of identity itself, in which identity coordinates are elicited through engineered relational events rather than retrieved through self-report. The paper concludes by identifying the question its own argument makes newly impossible to avoid: who determines the destination — and on what grounds.
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Alice Pau (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d5f0ee74eaea4b11a7a5a6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19443714
Alice Pau
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