An essay on the interface between basal affective life and symbolic interpretation within Signal-Bifurcation Theory (SBT). It does not ask how consciousness is produced, since SBT treats consciousness as the immediate, valence-weighted interior continuity of living organisation under sensorimotor coupling. It asks instead how Signal-Narration, the symbol-interpreting diagnostic overlay through which interior continuity becomes reportable, partitioned, and re-weighted, engages the affective and physiological conditions already present within Semepoietic consciousness. The essay distinguishes three domains of affective handling: immediate Semepoietic unfolding, sub-narrational modulation shaped by prior narrational engrams, and full Signal-Narration. On this basis, it reframes the subconscious not as a hidden subject but as the background zone in which prior symbolic inscription continues to shape present experience outside explicit report. The essay engages anaesthesia research as evidence for the architectural distinction between sensorimotor coupling and narrational overlay, and rereads psychoanalytic, behaviourist, and affective neuroscience traditions, Freud, Lacan, Jung, Ryle, and Solms, within SBT’s architecture. It concludes with an account of dreams as sub-narrational symbolic processing under conditions of reduced sensory input, in which affective concerns are recombined through the organism’s symbol-mediating capacities during physiological restoration.
Nicholas James Letchford (Mon,) studied this question.