Part II: Identity Thesis
Summary of Part II
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Summary of Part II
- Hard problem dissolved: By rejecting the privileged base layer, I’ve removed the demand for reduction. Experience is real at the experiential scale, just as chemistry is real at the chemical scale.
- Identity thesis: Experience is intrinsic cause-effect structure. This is an identity claim, not a correlation.
- Geometric phenomenology: Different affects correspond to different structural motifs. Rather than forcing all affects into a fixed grid, we identify the defining dimensions for each—the features without which that affect would not be that affect.
- Variable dimensionality: Joy requires four dimensions (valence, integration, rank, self-salience). Suffering requires three (valence, integration, rank). Anger requires other-model compression. Each affect gets the dimensions it needs.
- Suffering explained: High integration + low rank = intense but trapped. This is the core structural insight—why suffering feels more real than neutral states yet also inescapable.
- Operational measures: I’ve provided protocols for measuring structural features in both artificial and biological systems, with the understanding that not all measures are relevant to all phenomena.