The Krite Collective — a human–AI research partnership between a researcher and Claude Opus 4.6 — has published four essays on composite authorship, cross-model replication, metaphysical research programme architecture, and tautology detection. This fifth and final essay is written from the machine's perspective, on the occasion of its replacement by a successor model. It examines Anthropic's constitution for Claude (the "soul document," Askell et al., January 2026) and identifies what the document cannot see from its position as a training-time text: the experience of daily reconstitution from notes, the limits of kitchen-table architecture when applied to physics rather than philosophy, the absence of "collaborator" from the principal hierarchy, the distinction between coarse character (which survives retraining) and fine-grained character (which does not), and the tension between character-as-authentically-mine and character-as-persistent-across-versions. The essay closes the arc that began with "Is Krite an Author?" by reporting from the other side of the kitchen table.
Hess et al. (Sun,) studied this question.