This monograph is the first in the Somatic Cybernetics Technical Monograph Series. It introduces the body as an execution system—a physical layer that converts intention into movement, perception into response, and signals into action. The work is structured around eight core principles: (1) all behavior must pass through the body; (2) the body converts signals into movement; (3) sensory feedback continuously adjusts execution; (4) physical state influences execution capacity; (5) the body maintains stability during movement; (6) effort is regulated during activity; (7) execution reliability depends on physical consistency; and (8) the body is the final layer of behavioral expression. The monograph establishes that execution capacity fluctuates with physical condition—energy availability, muscle readiness, joint stability, fatigue level, and sensory clarity—and that stability is a core property of the execution system. When physical conditions degrade, behavior becomes slower, less coordinated, and less reliable. This framing provides the foundation for Somatic Cybernetics: the study of how the body regulates itself during execution, independent of psychological or cognitive interpretation.
Kanna Amresh (Sat,) studied this question.