This monograph is the second in the Somatic Cybernetics Technical Monograph Series. It builds on the foundation established in The Body as an Execution System by examining how physical state directly determines what actions are possible. The work is structured around eight principles: (1) physical state determines available energy; (2) muscle readiness influences movement quality; (3) joint stability affects execution control; (4) fatigue alters movement efficiency; (5) sensory clarity guides accurate execution; (6) breathing rhythm supports physical output; (7) physical noise can disrupt execution; and (8) physical state changes across time. The monograph establishes that execution capacity is not static—it fluctuates with energy availability, muscle readiness, joint stability, fatigue levels, sensory clarity, breathing rhythm, and internal signal noise. When these elements remain stable, the body executes actions reliably. When they shift, behavior may change even when intention remains the same. Physical state is therefore a key regulator of what actions a person can perform at any given moment, independent of cognitive or motivational factors. This framing advances Somatic Cybernetics as the study of how the body's physical condition governs execution capacity.
Kanna Amresh (Sat,) studied this question.