Lume-X introduces to my knowledge, the first deterministic multi-agent cognition substrate for governed, safety-critical, and replay-identical collective reasoning. Where Lume-V defines individual synthetic organisms as deterministic cognitive entities, Lume-X defines how multiple Lume-V organisms coexist, communicate, negotiate, arbitrate, and act collectively without introducing nondeterminism. I define a five-pillar multi-agent architecture — agent kernel, collective cognition, communication substrate, group governance, and cross-facility federation — and introduce sixty deterministic cognitive blocks spanning agent identity, safety envelopes, certificate chains, proposal exchange, cross-agent validation, negotiation, arbitration, role assignment, collective memory, perception fusion, actuation governance, risk modeling, ethical envelopes, compliance, learning, lifecycle management, and shutdown/restart protocols. Lume-X further specifies a complete integration layer bridging deterministic cognition (Lume-X) to deterministic operations (Lume-Ops) through bidirectional certificate-anchored translation, shared safety envelopes, aligned timebases, and cross-system arbitration. I formalize the Sovereign Autopilot, a deterministic autonomy engine; the Multi-Agent Orchestration Engine; the Deterministic Simulation Universe; and the Ω-Canon — a unified runtime specification binding cognition, operations, simulation, and governance into a single sovereign deterministic system. This work establishes **Deterministic Multi-Agent Cognition (DMAC)** as a new scientific category and positions Lume-X as the cognitive substrate for all Lume ecosystem verticals — medical, financial, operational, and beyond.
Ronald Jason Andrews (Thu,) studied this question.
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