This article develops a structural account of consciousness and uses it to reinterpret reproductive aversion and contemporary demographic decline. It begins by rejecting the dominant capacity paradigm, which treats consciousness as something a structure possesses once it meets the right functional or informational threshold. In its place, the article argues that consciousness is better understood as a maintenance response that arises when self-reference penetrates organization deeply enough to make complete closure unavailable. Under this condition of closure failure, a structure can no longer sustain coherence by operation alone and must supplement itself through what is here called the sentinel. From this account, the article draws a specifically human consequence. Developed self-referential subjectivity does not encounter reproduction first as future continuation, but as a present demand for the local recession of the very apparatus through which the subject maintains itself. This yields a reproductive paradox: the more deeply self-reference is installed, the more strongly the conditions of collective continuation may be experienced as forms of self-loss. The article distinguishes this claim from antinatalism by arguing that it operates at a prior, structural stratum rather than at the level of normative judgment. It concludes by redescribing demographic decline not as simple failure, choice, or value defect, but as the visible collective consequence of a form of subjectivity whose continuity can no longer be inhabited without self-loss.
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Akira Hattori
Film Independent
Film Independent
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Akira Hattori (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69eb0a66553a5433e34b47f7 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.17613/sdxtc-pyj88