This note proposes a fidelity-gradient model of reflective selfhood derived from the Stirps framework for structured intent alignment. In Stirps, the transferable unit is a gelation kit — a tuple of seed rule-set, cross-linking mechanism, emergent correction loop, and minimum enactment layer — proposed as a relatively high-fidelity transferable package for governance self-maintenance. We ask whether humans operate with lower-fidelity units inside an analogous architecture. Our central claim is that human governance seeds function as *hooks* — semantically shallow normative structures whose viability depends on sustained social correction infrastructure rather than on the precision of the seed itself. On this view, the apparatus of human socialisation is a combined transmission, redundancy, interpretation, arbitration, and correction layer for lossy governance hooks. Reflective selfhood emerges when an ecology of such hooks becomes sufficiently cross-linked and when the correction loop shifts from first-order behavioural enforcement to higher-order seed inspection and revision. We identify the *minimum viable hook* as the relevant developmental primitive, propose that adaptive drift correlates with correction-loop bandwidth rather than age, and close with brief design conjectures about whether the distribution of governance load between seed precision and runtime correction might serve as a research axis for AI governance.
Colin Bernhard Apel (Tue,) studied this question.