This manuscript extends conceptual frameworks originally developed in the doctoral dissertation Reclamation of the Quantum Self: A Multidimensional Approach Toward Integral Transpersonal Justice. Contemporary human systems increasingly encounter relational, technological, ecological, and sociocultural instability, requiring ongoing reinterpretation of worldview, identity, and engagement. Existing developmental and systems-oriented approaches frequently underemphasize how human knowing emerges through communication, environmental conditions, and contextual responsiveness. Drawing upon sociocybernetic and second-order cybernetic perspectives, this paper introduces the Quantum Self-Reclamation System (QSRS) as a framework for examining human knowing. QSRS conceptualizes human knowing as an ongoing and recursive process in which worldview, identity, and engagement evolve through communicative feedback, environmental variability, and lived experience. The framework contributes to sociocybernetic inquiry by positioning human knowing as an observable process for distinguishing and recalibrating recurring interpretive, relational, expressive, and contextual patterns. The paper further contributes to discussions of sustainability, ecological continuity, and human systems by examining how continuity is sustained amid relational, technological, ecological, and sociocultural instability. In doing so, QSRS offers a sociocybernetic approach grounded in human knowing, contextual responsiveness, communicative interaction, and environmental interconnectedness
Danielle Coats (Tue,) studied this question.