This document maps a research programme twenty years in the making. It traces the intellectual architecture of Expanded Intelligence — a body of work developed across two published books, a graduation thesis, conference presentations, a live governance methodology, and an operational AI platform — and presents its 124 distinct research contributions as a unified programme of inquiry. The programme addresses a single civilisational question from multiple directions: what becomes of human agency, identity, cognition, and social organisation when intelligence expands beyond the biological body? The answer unfolds across five interconnected domains — philosophy of technology, futures studies, human-AI relations, cognitive diversity and neurodivergence, and institutional governance methodology — producing original frameworks, named concepts, and operational proofs of concept that do not yet exist in the literature in this integrated form. The 124 entries documented here span 72 full papers, 45 concept notes, 1 creative/research object, and 2 historical records. They include frameworks such as the Seven Lenses analytical model, the Homo Expansus anthropological category, the Dyad as a relational theory of human-AI cognition, the Expanded Intelligence / ESI evolutionary lineage, the Round Table Protocol as a governance methodology, the 11-Layer AI Orchestration Framework, and The Pond as a theory of collective ethical intelligence. Together they constitute a research programme in the field of Human-Technology-World relations, with particular emphasis on the AI moment as a civilisational threshold. This overview is submitted as a programme preprint. Individual papers will follow as standalone submissions to their designated venues. All entries are timestamped here as prior art and intellectual record. Keywords: Expanded Intelligence · Homo Expansus · The Dyad · Human-AI relations · Philosophy of technology · Futures studies · Neurodivergence · ESI · The Pond · Round Table Protocol · AI orchestration · Civilisational change · Post-job economy · Cognitive sovereignty
Bibiana Xausa Bosak (Wed,) studied this question.