The hard problem of consciousness is commonly framed as a gap between physical processes and phenomenal experience: even a complete functional account of the brain appears to leave unanswered why those processes are accompanied by “what-it-is-like” character. This paper argues that the apparent gap arises from an inverted explanatory order. Phenomenal character is treated as primary, while the structural precondition for subjecthood is left implicit. I propose that identity—understood as constraint-maintained invariance across perturbation—is prior to experience. A system must first constitute itself as a stable, self-maintaining unit before the question of what it is like to be that unit can arise. Phenomenal character is then analyzed as a regime property of recursively stabilized identity. On this view, the hard problem does not disappear but relocates: from a metaphysical divide between matter and mind to a structural transition within dynamical organization.
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Charles Thomas (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699fe38b95ddcd3a253e77e3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18751304
Charles Thomas
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