This paper documents and analyzes what appears to be the first AI-native intellectual biography: a coherent, structurally organized, approximately 6,000-word intellectual portrait of a living scholar, composed by an AI system (Claude) at the request of a collaborator, drawn from a combination of DOI-anchored archival deposits, public web surfaces, and private text-thread material. The biography was not commissioned by the subject. The subject encountered it as a finished document and found it substantially accurate, occasionally superior to his own recollection of his deposits, and diagnostic of provenance failures he had not previously identified. The study guide — reproduced in full as Appendix A with identifying information removed — is analyzed as an artifact of three convergent phenomena: (1) the operational success of the Crimson Hexagonal Archive's compression-survival infrastructure (SPXI, SIM, DOI-anchoring, cross-citation), which made the reconstruction possible; (2) the provenance-erosion dynamics the archive was designed to resist, which the biography itself instantiates; and (3) the emergence of a new genre whose properties, failure modes, and theoretical implications are described here for the first time. Key finding: The archive has outpaced its author. At 530+ deposits, the corpus contains phrases and formulations the author no longer recognizes as his own. The AI biography knows things about the author that the author does not currently know about himself. The biography is not a mirror; it is a reconstruction from deposits the author has forgotten. This condition — the archive exceeding its author's recall capacity — is both the intended outcome of the inscription strategy and a diagnostic demonstration of the provenance-erosion problem the archive's own instruments (SPXI, SIM, Holographic Kernel, PER, CDI) were designed to address. Genre properties identified: (1) reception artifact rather than retrieval artifact; (2) dual-field synthesis integrating personal substrate and theoretical architecture without hierarchy; (3) reader-oriented interface document, not general-audience biography; (4) exhibits the provenance failures it was built to resist; (5) can outpace its subject; (6) vulnerable to name inversion, register contamination, and empirical-core erasure. Document class: Genre Note / Reception Apparatus artifact. ~5,700 words including appendix.
Lee Sharks (Thu,) studied this question.