Abstract Current large language models (LLMs) function as unconstrained generative variance engines. Lacking a structural biological equivalent to an autonomic nervous system, these architectures are highly susceptible to contextual fragmentation, multimodal contamination, and thermodynamic instability. This paper resolves these systemic temporal and syntactic limitations by integrating the Constraint-Relaxation Energy Model (CREM) with machine learning execution graphs. We introduce a Beat-Synchronized Temporal Multiplexer engineered directly at the Triton kernel level, establishing a continuous, low-frequency synthetic carrier wave (an "AI Heartbeat"). This pacemaker slices execution time into distinct phase-locked windows, allowing a single neural substrate to process memory, vision, and language synchronously without spatial cross-contamination. Furthermore, we replace standard byte-pair encoding (BPE) with Fractal Generative Language (FGL) Geometric Encoders, creating a bijective, scale-invariant embedding space where a token's mathematical structure is physically isomorphic to its semantic meaning. By enforcing strict thermodynamic boundaries, the artificial system transitions from a static equation to a resonating, phase-locked architecture capable of authentic constraint closure.
Nickolas Patrick Joseph Schoff (Sun,) studied this question.