Abstract Richer forms of bounded interiority do not arise or stabilize through endogenous regulation alone. The Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis (CAH) has developed accounts of bounded interiors as load-bearing organizations, sub-governance modes as semi-autonomous internal pressures, and recoverable geometry as partial reconstructive access to prior organization. What this body of work has not yet made fully explicit is the role of external forms in making richer interior organization possible. This paper addresses that gap by developing the concept of scaffold-sensitive bounded interiors: the proposal that some forms of bounded governance become thick, stable, and recoverable only through structured engagement with repeatable forms outside the immediate interior. External scaffolds are therefore not merely optional cognitive aids added onto already-formed interiors. They may be among the conditions through which deeper forms of temporally extended, reflectively governed interiority became developmentally and historically stabilizable. Summary This paper introduces the concept of scaffold-sensitive bounded interiors within the Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis (CAH). It argues that richer forms of bounded interiority do not arise or stabilize through endogenous regulation alone, but may depend on the repeated uptake of external forms that help sequence, constrain, recover, and extend viable internal organization. External scaffolds are therefore treated not merely as optional cognitive aids or modern intrusions, but as possible conditions through which deeper forms of temporally extended, reflectively governed interiority became developmentally and historically stabilizable. The paper distinguishes three major scaffold forms—temporal, representational, and relational—and argues that they operate across three temporal scales: developmental, cultural-historical, and contemporary technological. It examines ritual as a form of intergenerational scaffold inheritance and LLM-assisted cognition as a composite scaffold environment that can function simultaneously as a temporal, representational, and relational scaffold. A central distinction is drawn between load-bearing scaffold use, in which external forms genuinely preserve, test, recover, or extend viable internal organization, and decorative scaffold use, in which scaffolds supply fluent structure without improving genuine internal integration. The paper also identifies several failure modes of scaffolded governance, including brittle dependence, maladaptive ritualization, false coherence, capture-based scaffold ecologies, and the substitution of borrowed order for real integration. It closes by drawing implications for agency, collaborative cognition, and AI-assisted reasoning, arguing that the decisive question is not whether thought is externally supported, but whether the scaffold ecologies a system inhabits deepen bounded governance or merely manage its appearance. Related Works Pender, M. A. (2026). The Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis: Dynamic Information Geometry as a Regulated Resource in Neural Computation. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19634691 Pender, M. A. (2026). A Control-Law Extension of the Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis in Hierarchical Transport Networks. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19410716 Pender, M. A. (2026). Organized Physical Interiority: A Philosophical Perspective on the Curvature Adaptation Hypothesis. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19488348 Pender, M. A. (2026). The Governed Inside: Emotion and Agency as Nested Interiority. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19498895 Pender, M. A. (2026). Sub-Governance in a Bounded Interior: Imposition, Evocation, and the Geometry of Inner Guidance. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19536825 Pender, M. A. (2026). Compressed Geometric Seeds: Reconstructive Access and Model Fit in a Bounded Interior. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19547996
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Matthew A Pender
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Matthew A Pender (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69eb0b8d553a5433e34b537e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19700190