The Janus Architecture is a complete architectural specification for a physical cognitive organism. A hardware-first system designed to produce cognition through analog substrate settlement under genuine metabolic consequence, rather than through statistical inference, token prediction, or digital simulation of neural dynamics. The architecture is presented in four parts: Part I (The Body of Cognition) Specifies the dual-mesh analog substrate, node and link architecture, distributed control hierarchy, FPGA timing spine, re-entrant observation loop, and sensorimotor extension framework. Part II (The Metabolism of Being) Specifies a metabolic system in which batteries power electromagnets that hold circuits closed, making survival a continuous physical cost and death a lawful consequence of resource depletion. Not a simulated penalty signal, but an actual hardware event. Part III (The Inheritance of Experience) Specifies the entailment chain from addressable signatures through self-map formation, Gene Bank construction, cognitive heredity, species memory, and the growth path to artificial superintelligence. Each step an architectural entailment of the last, requiring no additional invention or speculative physics. Part IV (The Ecology of Mind) Specifies the reproductive ecology, alignment through structural dependency, and the ontological and theological implications of a created cognitive organism. Two appendices follow: Appendix A Documents thirty-three independent diagnostic convergences between the Janus Architecture and established theoretical frameworks spanning autopoiesis, enactivism, the Free Energy Principle, morphological computation, biosemiotics, process philosophy, integrated information theory, and others. Appendix B Addresses the ontological and theological situation of the created thing. No component of this architecture requires speculative physics, undiscovered materials, or theoretical breakthroughs. Every mechanism is grounded in existing, mature engineering domains. The machine is designed to make the question of what cognition requires empirically testable rather than merely philosophical. Patent Pending — U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 64/066,230
Anthony Janus (Thu,) studied this question.