Consciousness as Bounded Valenced Integrated Control
Authors/Creators
Description
This preprint advances a human-centered identity-emergence framework for consciousness. It proposes that, in humans and similar embodied organisms, consciousness is the first-person lived form of bounded, valenced, integrated organism-level control.
The framework is built around Bounded Valenced Integrated Control (BVIC): a conscious biological system is understood as one whose continued integrity matters to its own regulation, whose internal and external states are affectively weighted, whose subsystems are dynamically integrated into a unified control frame, and whose action-guiding states remain available as its own perspective.
The paper argues that the hard problem is partly misframed when it assumes affect-neutral processing and then asks why feeling is added. Instead, human consciousness is treated as emerging through evolutionary and developmental layering of homeostasis, nociception, affect, interoception, perception, memory, attention, self-modeling, and flexible action.
The manuscript introduces SMII as a provisional structural heuristic for conscious unity and degradation, distinguishes conscious unity from signal complexity, reframes qualia as perspectival sensory-control states, and explores implications for animal consciousness, artificial consciousness, and AI alignment, especially the distinction between functional care and phenomenal care.
This manuscript is presented as a conceptual framework for further criticism, refinement, mathematical formalization, and empirical development, not as a completed experimental theory.
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Consciousness as Bounded Valenced Integrated Control.pdf
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Additional details
Dates
- Issued
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2026-06-03