This working paper proposes a minimal structural account of the human within the SΔϕ Formalism. Rather than defining the human through rationality, subjectivity, autonomy, or consciousness alone, it argues that the human must be understood at a lower operational level: as a being that continues under irreversibility, stabilizes itself through belief, inhabits fictions under non-consensus, and editorially rebinds itself to the consequences of what it has already become. The paper begins from the premise that the human is not primarily a sovereign subject, but a being that knows there is no final external arbiter with whom reality can be fully settled by consensus. Under this condition, belief is not treated as truth possession, but as a minimal fixation required for continued operation. Conviction thickens fixation through repeated re-entry, while certainty raises the cost of revision through authority-weighting. The decisive question is therefore not whether fixation exists, but whether it remains editable. On this basis, fiction is not approached as decorative imagination or mere falsehood, but as a habitable stabilizing structure built under non-consensus. Human beings do not merely generate such structures; they inhabit them, bind themselves through them, and absorb their costs. Because human life unfolds over irreversible traces whose low-cost return paths close under restoration-cost escalation, the human condition is inseparable from post-hoc editing: narrativizing, repairing, regretting, reinterpreting, and reassigning responsibility after consequential transitions have already occurred. The paper further situates the human under default power, unequal rollback conditions, and authority assignment under uncertainty. Human beings do not live in neutral choice spaces. They live in worlds where one path is often made cheapest in advance, where convenience hardens into fixation, and where freedom depends less on nominal options than on whether non-default paths remain practically editable. The central thesis is: The human is the being that must continue without a final arbiter, assign belief under non-consensus, inhabit fictions under defaulted worlds, and post-hoc edit irreversible consequences. This document brings together prior SΔϕ themes—irreversibility, absent arbitration, belief as minimal fixation, fiction as habitable structure, default power, and post-hoc editability—into a unified minimal account of the human.
Sofience (Sat,) studied this question.