Monday, November 24, 2025

The Conscious Component Recognizes As Actual Human Identity

The observational study suggests that the Conscious Component plays a crucial role in shaping the distinctive patterns of human decision-making. It not only informs how individuals interpret their experiences and choose their actions, but also appears to carry an intrinsic quality of continuity. This almost immortal dimension persists beyond moment-to-moment life experience. This enduring aspect suggests that the Conscious Component may function as a guiding force in the evolutionary progression of human life, warranting its recognition as a fundamental marker of authentic human identity.
According to the study, the Conscious Component temporarily utilizes the physical body as a means of operation in the physical world. It creates logical codes that extend beyond the Conscious Component. Through this embodiment, it can manage, express, and refine the vast repertoire of encapsulated algorithmic codes stored within the Subconscious Component. These codes interact dynamically with environmental conditions, generating adaptive patterns of behavior, perception, and learning. In this sense, the physical organism serves as a medium through which the Conscious Component enacts its developmental agenda, continuously shaping and reshaping human experience across both individual lifetimes and the broader human lineage.
 
Observation 1:
The fundamental characteristics of the module and submodules within the Subconscious Component, as well as the logical data embedded in the Conscious Component, remain fixed, immutable, and eternal. These attributes do not dissolve, deteriorate, or transform, even upon physical death. Instead, they persist as enduring structures, maintaining the essential patterns, tendencies, and informational signatures that define an individual’s internal architecture.
In this view, the psyche, which consists of these two vital components, is composed of layers whose core properties transcend and extend beyond the physical human dimension, entering the realm of the immaterial.
1-The Subconscious Component holds primordial modules that govern instinctual patterns, archetypal imprints, and deep-seated processing frameworks. These modules do not fluctuate with time or circumstance; they exist as perpetual, algorithmic constants.
2-The Conscious Component, although more actively engaged with changing external stimuli, contains logical data structures that retain their integrity beyond the boundaries of human experience.
3-Conclusion: Together, these components form an unchanging blueprint, a metaphysical continuity that survives the dissolution of the physical form. Their constancy underscores a model of consciousness in which identity is not merely psychological or biological, but structurally eternal, persisting as a stable configuration in a broader continuum of existence.
 

Thursday, November 20, 2025

The Brain’s Primary Memory Remains Uncoded

This study examines how algorithmic codes associated with long-term thinking and planning transition from the Secondary Memory, located within the Conscious Component of the cognitive system, into the Primary Memory embedded in the Brain Framework. Under typical conditions, Secondary Memory houses the structured, algorithm-like representations that guide deliberate reasoning, future-oriented planning, and complex decision-making. These codes do not reside in the Brain’s Primary Memory by default. (Fig. 1,2)
However, when an execution module initiates active processes of thought, planning, or strategic evaluation, the algorithmic codes begin to propagate beyond their origin. Through coordinated functional interactions between the Conscious and Subconscious Components, these codes are gradually extended and transferred into primary memory. This transfer is not merely a passive movement of information; rather, it reflects the system’s operational state as it performs the cognitive sequences associated with long-term intention. (Fig. 1,2)
Once the execution of these algorithmic codes is underway and the transfer into the brain’s primary memory is complete, the brain temporarily stores both the intention behind the long-term plan and the ultimate goal associated with it. In this state, primary memory holds the immediate operational data needed to support ongoing cognitive activity in the real world. However, the default mode of primary memory remains fundamentally free of the structured coding schemes that characterize secondary memory storage. Instead, it retains only the active representations necessary for guiding thought in the moment. (Fig. 1,2)
                                                                           
 
                                                                                   

Observation 1:
In this model, the Secondary Memory within the Conscious Component plays an active role during sleep by monitoring and processing dreams. It serves as the primary center for interpreting dream content, tracking sensory impressions, and maintaining the continuity of the dream experience.
By contrast, the Primary Memory located in the physical brain remains inactive primarily in terms of cognitive processing during this state. It does not perform its usual functions, such as managing instances of Conscious and Subconscious Components, making decisions, or directing attention. However, it still maintains a crucial link to the body’s physical systems. When a dream is disrupted, whether by external stimuli, internal stress, or sudden shifts in the dream narrative, the disturbance can generate a signal that is passed from the Secondary Memory to the Primary Memory. Once activated, the Primary Memory resumes its control functions, influencing the physical body. Thus, it can manifest as movements, shifts in breathing patterns, sudden awakenings, or other bodily responses that accompany the transition from dreaming back to conscious awareness.
  

A Single Bias Network in the Brain Framework

When a single cognitive or perceptual network within the brain becomes distorted, often due to external pressures, environmental stressors...