This essay treats language as a paradoxical cognitive technology: a compact, lossy code that nonetheless seems to enable the felt continuity of consciousness and deliberation. I propose that inner speech is primarily a communicative act—even when its audience is oneself—because producing language requires implicitly modeling an interpreter. That recursive “communicator–interceptor” loop yields a third-person stance on the self: we experience ourselves as an object because the brain simulates how another would parse our explanations. On this view, consciousness is not the executive source of action but an emergent side-effect of self-communication, which can sometimes influence behavior by feeding structured, compressed summaries back into the subconscious system that largely decides and acts. The model also clarifies familiar frictions between stated intentions and action, and suggests a resource trade-off: language can refine control and insight by forcing thought through an efficient channel, yet it can also inhibit performance by consuming neural capacity, explaining the phenomenology of flow, skill acquisition, and the difficulty of sustained narration. Finally, I sketch a continuum hypothesis: non-linguistic animals may possess forms of second-order volition without the same self-modeling phenomenology, while communicative species may exhibit graded consciousness and agency.
Richard Csaky (Tue,) studied this question.