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CODES Framework ABSTRACT Human knowledge is typically described as a linear progression from observation to theory. Historical evidence, cognitive science, and structural analysis suggest that this view is incomplete. Knowledge emerges through a recursive process that begins in symbolic form—fiction, metaphor, narrative, myth—long before formalization becomes possible. This paper proposes Symbolic Pre-Formalism: a rare cognitive mechanism through which individuals express early, partial structures of future theories in symbolic media. These symbolic forms act as compressed prototypes, enabling contradiction-tolerant representation before logical or mathematical articulation is available. The theory integrates classical epistemological models (Plato, Aristotle, Kant, Peirce, Popper, Kuhn, Polanyi, Lakatos) with contemporary insights from cognitive architecture, compression-based reasoning, developmental cognition, and recursive self-reference. Case studies from Goethe, Jung, Borges, Lem, Hesse, and others illustrate the symbolic-to-formal transition across history. The paper then synthesizes these insights into a unified model of six knowledge-emergence modes: sensory compression, symbolic pre-formalism, drift-correction learning, recursive self-reference, social distribution, and deterministic formalization. The resulting framework reframes creativity, scientific discovery, and cognitive development as deterministic, coherence-seeking processes rather than stochastic events. Symbolic forms hold and preserve early structure; formal systems complete it. This unified model clarifies how insight arises, how symbolic narratives anticipate future conceptual frameworks, and why the symbolic → formal recursion is a universal yet uncommon mode of human cognition.
Bostick, Devin (Wed,) studied this question.