This technical note develops a structural-regulatory account of thinking within human psychic processing, as part of the Human Psychic Processing / Psychological Architecture branch of the General Theory of Cognitive Structuring (GTCS). The aim is not to replace cognitive, linguistic, philosophical, or neuroscientific theories of thought, but to locate thinking within a broader architecture of manifestation, attention, significance, overload, identity, and admissibility. The note treats thinking as symbolic holding and temporal configuration within psychic regulation. Thinking gives symbolic form to manifest and weighted material, holds attentional configurations across time, projects possible continuations, and makes them available for preliminary coherence-related evaluation before action or structural updating. Symbolic form is not limited to language; it may include words, images, scenes, narratives, roles, categories, diagrams, remembered situations, and imagined continuations. The central claim is that thinking can make psychic material symbolically workable without necessarily making it structurally transformable. Thinking may articulate, compare, simulate, justify, reframe, map conflict, repeat, or stabilize material. It can open possible transformation, but it can also defend existing constraints through justification, symbolic capture, abstraction, displacement, or repetition. The report distinguishes symbolic possibility from structural possibility. A continuation may be imaginable without being livable; a conflict may be mapped without becoming resolvable; a formulation may be clear without becoming admissible for change. Thinking can generate regulatory proposals, but admissibility determines whether symbolic work can become structural transformation.
Kostiantyn Osmolovskyi (Sat,) studied this question.