The nature and function of the self remain central yet contested issues in consciousness research. While often treated as an ontological subject or a narrative construction, the self is rarely examined in terms of the operational constraints imposed by conscious meaning production. In this work, meaning is conceptualized as a costly adaptive process shaped by temporal, energetic, and regulatory limitations. Building on this premise, the self is reconceptualized not as a unitary entity but as a multi-interface architecture required to manage meaning cost under selection pressure.The proposed framework defines the self as an indexical system composed of four coordinated interfaces—subjectivity, continuity, agency, and reality filtering—each contributing distinct organizational functions while remaining selectively dissociable. Temporal tagging and sequencing are shown to be indispensable for comparison, reuse, and adaptive acceleration, enabling cost-efficient meaning production. Self-control is further distinguished as a non-experiential, meta-regulatory function that optimizes speed by selecting among pre-established interpretive pathways rather than exerting conscious inhibition.To address concerns of speculative abstraction, the model is grounded in convergent biological parallels across immunological regulation, molecular context sensitivity, and epigenetic threshold modulation. These parallels suggest that the proposed self architecture reflects a general adaptive strategy for balancing responsiveness and cost, instantiated at the level of conscious experience.Taken together, this work positions the self not as the source of consciousness, but as its necessary interface—an adaptive solution to the problem of sustaining coherent, efficient action without collapsing under the cost of unrestricted meaning production.
Reyhan Karataş (Sun,) studied this question.
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