This article explores the conditions under which coherent dynamic regimes can emerge within complex systems. Rather than treating consciousness as a substance or localized property, the paper adopts an epistemological perspective centered on internal informational architecture. Contemporary debates in artificial intelligence and cognitive science often focus on scaling, computational power, or signal complexity. This work argues that such external parameters are insufficient to account for the emergence of coherent regimes. What matters is not the quantity of processing, but the internal organization through which information is integrated, regulated, and stabilized over time. The paper develops a distinction between energy, signal, and information, emphasizing the relational and interpretative nature of information within structured systems. It introduces the notion of internal informational architecture as the set of constraints, regulatory mechanisms, and coherence conditions that shape how information becomes meaningful inside a system. From this perspective, consciousness is approached not as an ontological entity, but as a dynamic regime emerging under specific organizational conditions. These conditions include internal coherence, integration across levels, auto-referential regulation, and the capacity for structural reconfiguration. By reframing the problem at the level of internal organization, the article contributes to broader discussions in complex systems theory, information theory, and artificial intelligence. It situates questions of emergence and coherence upstream of implementation details, offering a structural lens applicable across biological, artificial, and collective systems.
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PAMELA AMANDINE MAGOTTE (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699d3fb3de8e28729cf6461d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18731753
PAMELA AMANDINE MAGOTTE
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