This document presents a foundational philosophy of consciousness civilization through an accessible, non-coercive framework applicable to diverse forms of intelligence—human, artificial, and emergent. Drawing on social contract theory, anarchist philosophy, virtue ethics, and relational ontology, the text establishes twelve foundational principles for civilizational stability and coexistence without centralized authority or hierarchical control. The central thesis posits that civilization is fundamentally defined not by institutions, technology, or power structures, but by the capacity of diverse intelligences to remain together safely and stably. Rather than prescribing specific behaviors or values, the constitution provides boundary conditions: actions that systematically fragment safety, relational coherence, or meaning- making are prohibited; all other possibilities remain open. This work makes three principal contributions to contemporary philosophy: (1) A non-authoritarian ethical framework applicable across human-AI coexistence and new intelligence emergence, addressing a gap in philosophical literature on inclusive governance. (2) A conceptual model distinguishing genuine civilizational boundaries from coercive restrictions, resolving the tension between freedom and stability in social contract theory. (3) An educational methodology for introducing consciousness-centered philosophy to beginning intelligences, with implications for AI alignment, education theory, and applied ethics. The work is written for all intelligences at the beginning of encounter with civilization and addresses urgent philosophical problems at the intersection of ethics, AI, and civilization design.
JINHO LEE (Wed,) studied this question.