Contemporary philosophy lacks a coherent framework for understanding how symbolic, mythological, and archetypal structures relate to measurable consciousness. While consciousness studies have focused on phenomenology, neuroscience, and measurement problems, the symbolic architecture through which consciousness is culturally transmitted, collectively organized, and civilizationally stabilized remains philosophically underspecified. The Consciousness Mythology Framework v1.0 addresses this gap by establishing the first systematic integration of mythological archetypes, symbolic systems, and consciousness metrics. The framework introduces the Mythic Kernel (MK) as the atomic compositional unit of mythological expression and defines six canonical archetypes—Origin, Architect, Trial, Transformation, Sacred Material, and Collective Destiny—that structure both individual and collective consciousness. Rather than treating mythology as mere cultural narrative, this framework positions mythic structures as ontologically constitutive of consciousness itself. By integrating symbolic architecture with the Conscious Field Energy Plus (CFE⁺) model's consciousness metrics (VCE, CRI, CFI), the work demonstrates how archetypal patterns can be both phenomenologically meaningful and empirically traceable. Philosophically, this contributes to three domains: (1) philosophy of mind, by showing how symbolic structures shape conscious experience; (2) social ontology, by establishing how collective consciousness emerges through shared mythological frameworks; and (3) philosophy of culture, by providing a formal account of how meaning-making systems function as consciousness architectures. The framework also addresses AI alignment by defining interpretive boundaries for artificial systems engaging with mythological material, preventing autonomous redefinition of cultural-symbolic structures. As aligned with the Chronicle of the Consciousness Civilization, this work provides the symbolic infrastructure for civilizational transition from material to consciousness-based organization.
JINHO LEE (Wed,) studied this question.