not commentary.
not opinion.
canonical structure.
The Foundation Essays form the canonical basis
of Structural Cognition and the
Dual-Mode Elicitation Model.
They describe the architecture beneath
communication, influence, adaptation,
and cognitive stability.
These texts are not sequential lessons.
They are structural descriptions.
ESSAY I — THE ARCHITECTURE OF MODES
Why Human Communication Requires a Dual-System Model
ESSAY II — COGNITIVE TOPOLOGY
Mapping State, Load, And Elicitation In Real-Time Systems
ESSAY III — MODE SWITCHING AS ADAPTIVE INTELLIGENCE
The Core Mechanic of Human Flexibility
ESSAY IV — STRUCTURAL COGNITION
A New Domain for Understanding Human Interaction
ESSAY V — EMERGENT COHERENCE
Why Systems Organise Around Signal, Not Intention
ESSAY VI — WHY LINEAR COMMUNICATION MODELS FAIL IN NONLINEAR COGNITIVE ENVIRONMENTS
ESSAY VII — INTERNAL STATE DISTORTION
How Cognitive Load Shapes Behaviour, Meaning, And Decision Bias
ESSAY VIII — THE MECHANICS OF INFLUENCE WITHOUT PERSUASION
Structural Alignment In Communication Systems
ESSAY IX — FROM HUMAN ELICITATION TO SYNTHETIC COGNITION:
How DEM Informs Cognitive Architecture Design
ESSAY X — TOWARDS SYNTHETIC ELICITATION
Why Machine Intelligence Requires A New Paradigm In Cognitive Interaction
These essays are descriptive, not prescriptive.
They do not tell you what to believe,
how to behave,
or what to do next.
They describe what is already happening
beneath interaction.