Abstract This note addresses a pressure point in theories of consciousness and selfhood: how to explain first-person continuity without reducing identity to a static pattern or appealing to a deeper filtered subject. The Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis (CAH) argues that the active “I,” the larger bounded self, and personal identity should be distinguished rather than collapsed. The “I” is the presently dominant governance regime, the self is the bounded interior that can host multiple modes, and identity consists in the lawful continuity by which governance shifts while boundedness is preserved. This distinction helps explain how a generator model can preserve first-person irreducibility and non-interchangeability without invoking an external consciousness source. The note is limited to establishing this conceptual bridge and does not attempt a full developmental or formal theory of identity. Summary Accounts of personal identity frequently encounter a familiar philosophical pressure point: how to explain the continuity of the first-person “I” through substantial internal change without reducing the self to a static informational pattern or appealing to a deeper, extra-physical subject (e.g., filter models). This conceptual note extends the Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis (CAH) and the framework of Organized Physical Interiority to address this dilemma. It argues that much of the difficulty in consciousness theory arises from collapsing three distinct phenomena into one. To resolve this, the paper proposes a three-layer distinction: The Active "I" / Ego (The Governor): The presently dominant governance regime or local center of executive salience. The Bounded Self: The larger, metabolically maintained, load-bearing interior capable of hosting multiple semi-coherent sub-governance modes and latent dispositions. Personal Identity: The lawful, path-dependent continuity by which governance shifts are managed while the bounded interior is preserved. By framing identity not as a frozen snapshot of content, but as the dynamic continuity of a physical interior, this framework provides a new lens for understanding both lived continuity and psychological rupture (e.g., dissociation or depersonalization). Furthermore, this distinction provides "generator" theories of consciousness with a physically grounded defense against classic duplication and teleportation paradoxes. It demonstrates how first-person subjectivity can be physically generated yet historically non-interchangeable, preserving the irreducibility of the "I" without requiring an external source of consciousness. Related Works Pender, M. A. (2026). Organized Physical Interiority: A Philosophical Perspective on the Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19488348 Pender, M. A. (2026). The Governed Inside: Emotion and Agency as Nested Interiority. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19498895 CAH Foundational Work: Pender, M. A. (2026). Dynamic Curvature Adaptation: A Unified Geometric Theory of Cortical State and Pathological Collapse. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19424978 Pender, M. A. (2026). Computation as Constrained Transport: A Geometric Perspective on Information Processing. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19410259 Pender, M. A. (2026). Beyond Mean Curvature: Lower-Tail Routing Structure in Controlled Hierarchical Networks. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19341335
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Matthew A Pender
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Matthew A Pender (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e07de52f7e8953b7cbede8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19578281
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