Why do living systems feel at all? Why did emotion, motivation, and consciousness arise—and why in this particular form? After decades of clinical observation and biological study, a unifying answer emerged not from abstract speculation, but from listening closely to the body’s molecular language of regulation. Across vertebrates, a single precursor molecule—pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)—coordinates the organism’s response to change by cleaving into three neuropeptides with distinct regulatory roles: adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), which mobilizes; β-endorphin, which conserves; and α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH), which enables repair, recalibration, and the restoration of safety. This triphasic sequence—mobilize, conserve, integrate—is not merely biochemical efficiency. It reflects a recursive regulatory grammar by which living systems allocate resources under conditions of threat or opportunity. Metastrophe Theory names this logic. It describes a fractal adaptive regulatory framework in which systems default to biphasic oscillation—expansion and contraction—but recruit a third, integrative process when oscillation alone fails to restore coherence. Integration does not add a new state; it rewrites the conditions under which future states are entered, enabling transformation without collapse. In biological systems, this grammar is not metaphorical. It is molecular. This paper (Part I) presents the Neuropeptide Affect Architecture as a vertebrate instantiation of Metastrophe Theory at the level of affect. Affect is treated not as a psychological epiphenomenon, but as the somatic signal of need relative to availability—an embodied solution to thermoeconomic problems of demand and supply. When α-MSH signaling is insufficient, regulation remains threat-locked and effectively biphasic; when α-MSH is more readily available, regulation becomes triphasic, enabling the transformation of threat into opportunity. Organized spatially, this logic yields eight extreme affective attractor states—four threat-valence and four opportunity-valence configurations—structured by mobilization versus conservation and by available reserves. The framework generates falsifiable predictions testable via heart-rate-variability measures, neuropeptide assays, and experimental manipulations of stress, energy availability, and valence. Parts II and III will formalize the mathematical properties of this architecture and extend it across developmental, cognitive, and evolutionary scales. Here, the focus is on the biological hinge itself: how feeling arises, why it takes the shape it does, and how integration restores coherence when regulation fails.
Mitchell Slutzky (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: