Alarm Is Not Pain — But Pain Is One Kind of Alarm
Description
This preprint explores a reframing of pain, meaning, and alarms in both biological and artificial systems. Rather than asking whether machines can feel pain, the work argues that the more fundamental issue is whether a system can ignore internal damage without consequence. Using everyday analogies—such as dashboard warnings, silent system failures, and biological illness—the article proposes that pain is only one form of alarm, not the defining feature of meaningful disruption. Meaning arises when a signal is bound to internal cost and threatens system continuity. This work provides a conceptual and ethical foundation aligned with the AURA-X Ω framework, emphasizing silent alarms, continuity under constraint, and non-expressive forms of breakdown in intelligent systems.
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