Consciousness frameworks operate on systems already treated as bounded units of analysis. Each major framework has a formal entry point at which a candidate space — a region of physical substrate treated as supporting candidate partitions — must be specified for the framework's operations to be defined. The candidate space is not produced by the framework's apparatus; it is presupposed at the point where the apparatus becomes applicable. The paper identifies this structural feature — candidate-space dependence — in three major consciousness frameworks (Integrated Information Theory, Global Workspace Theory, the Free Energy Principle) and distinguishes it from the individuation question taken up in a companion gateway. Candidate-space dependence implicates a formation question distinct from the questions consciousness frameworks have organized themselves around: under what conditions does a region of physical reality come to constitute a candidate space at all? The Identology corpus develops the formation question through a paper sequence — Constraint Topology and the Precedence of Systemhood V2, Closure Formation as Admissible Instability, Basin Genesis, Consolidation, and Closure Before Bearers — that characterizes the structural conditions for closure formation through a three-stage dependency: landscape admissibility, coupling admissibility, and closure activation. The paper does not redevelop that apparatus; it identifies the dependency structure, places the corpus's apparatus in methodological alignment with the universality-class discipline developed in critical phenomena, and clarifies the corpus's two-doorway approach to closure under maintenance: formation and individuation as complementary entry points. The contribution is positional rather than constructive: the diagnosis specifies conditions of applicability rather than critiquing framework content, and the formation question is identified as prior to the questions consciousness frameworks have asked.
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Charles S. Thomas
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Charles S. Thomas (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0aad145ba8ef6d83b708cd — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20247684
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