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Karel Hrubec

4 papers in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Minimal Public Formulation of the Projected Presence Framework Conditions, Distinctions, Failure Criteria, and Empirical Readiness for Future Consciousness Research

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) July 9, 2026 Karel Hrubec

Consciousness is not explained solely by organismic regulation; the hard problem begins when stabilized organismic access becomes lived presence. This theoretical note consolidates the Projected Presence Framework into a criticizable conceptual architecture, distinguishing organismic regulation, stabilized access, projected presence, selfhood, will, dogma, correction resistance, and feedback regulation to prevent category collapse between functional access, lived presence, self-modeling, and agency. The framework is positioned against access consciousness, phenomenal consciousness, Global Neuronal Workspace, predictive processing, self-model theory, illusionism, embodied cognition, and neurophenomenology.

The Hard Problem of Projected Presence Reframing Consciousness Through Organismic Stabilization

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) July 8, 2026 Karel Hrubec

Consciousness should not be treated as an inner observer or private theater, but as the biologically constrained stabilization of organismic regulation into an access-field that becomes lived as inner presence. The explanatory gap is not across consciousness as an undefined whole, but at the transition between stabilized organismic access and lived presence. The framework introduces a recurrent feedback loop in which projected presence can re-enter subsequent organismic regulation through attention, affective weighting, threat evaluation, memory, action-readiness, and correction uptake. The contribution is theoretical and methodological, offering a disciplined research scaffold for future work on consciousness, embodiment, agency, and selfhood.

Consciousness as Projected Stabilization of the Biological Organism Selfhood, Will, and Inner Presence as Stabilized Biological Outputs

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) July 7, 2026 Karel Hrubec

Consciousness can be understood not as an inner observer or metaphysical foundation but as a biologically constrained stabilization of organismic regulation. The paper introduces the Projected Stabilization Thesis, arguing that consciousness is an access-field making bodily state, environmental orientation, temporal continuity, affective relevance, and action-readiness available without an inner observer. It distinguishes three coupled stabilizations: consciousness as a stabilized access-field, selfhood as a stabilized image of organismic continuity, and will as a stabilized interpretation of organismic direction. The concept of dogmatic immunization describes pathological stabilization where a stabilized image becomes protected from correction despite counter-pressure. The framework preserves the biological reality of conscious experience while removing the methodological immunity of first-person immediacy.

The Organismic Projection Framework: Consciousness, Mortality, and the Operational Boundaries of Metaphysical Concepts

Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research) June 19, 2026 Karel Hrubec

The Organismic Projection Framework (OPF) reorients philosophy of mind by starting from the human as an organism that sustains a bounded projection regime—of world, self-location, valuation, and duration—rather than as a consciousness inhabiting a body. The framework clarifies how concepts like death, eternity, and post-mortem continuity depend on organismically bounded duration and perspective. It does not solve the hard problem of consciousness or replace neuroscience, but functions as a burden-of-intelligibility framework: any claim about personal conscious continuity beyond organismic death must explain how duration, self-location, memory, valuation, and state-transition remain meaningful after the cessation of the projection regime.