Classical accounts in philosophy of mind treat internal conflict as a defect of agency — weakness of will, irrationality, or failure of self-control. Yet conflict is not exceptional: it is pervasive, structured, and consistent with converging evidence from cognitive science and clinical research that cognition is distributed across semi-autonomous subsystems. This paper argues that coherent agency does not require psychological unity. It requires governance. The Modular Governance Model (MGM) proposes that the human mind is organized as six functionally distinct modules operating under a governance regime that can be Sovereign, Instable, or Colonized. A Library of False Selves — assemblages of mimetic fragments installed through developmental and cultural imprinting — can serve authentic governance or usurp it. The narcissistic Colonized Regime — where a False Self has taken the executive position while the affective core remains physiologically intact but governance-excluded — serves as the paradigm diagnostic case. It explains a documented clinical fact that existing frameworks do not: the 63–64% dropout rate and the systematic failure of standard therapy in malignant narcissism. MGM generates four falsifiable predictions and reframes agency, authenticity, and therapeutic change as governance phenomena.
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Emmanuelle Mury (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69f5945c71405d493afff33d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19918775
Emmanuelle Mury
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