This paper develops a new position in the metaphysics of consciousness: a serial and liminal cosmopsychism. Standard cosmopsychism (priority cosmopsychism; Bernardo Kastrup's analytic idealism) treats the cosmic subject as prior and already complete, and so faces the decombination problem — how one cosmic consciousness divides into the many private subjects we observe. The paper reverses that assumption (the cosmic One is terminal, not original) and then generalizes it: because a unity requires at least two relata, a single completed global One is not merely distant but incoherent, and unity is instead a recurrent local event at each qualitative threshold (¶).The decisive move is serial monism: at any instant exactly one point is conscious — the "lit point" — while the others are not co-present but distributed across time and preserved as deposited "inflections" in a pre-subjective connective field. This dissolves not only decombination but the synchronic combination problem itself (the unity of the present subject), since there is never more than one subject to unify. The cosmic One is recast as an inexperienceable topology — real and analysable, yet never lived as a totality. Time is treated as a quasi-stable block in motion, traversed non-chronologically by qualitative rather than spatiotemporal proximity; direction is read upward from accumulated densification, with its selection bias acknowledged. The paper answers the older question of whether a self survives the threshold — a trajectory crosses, not a mnemonic ego — and relocates the open frontier to a now-formalizable object: the metric of qualitative proximity, named here as the central problem of a research programme. It states its remaining costs plainly (chiefly the charge of eliminativism that serial monism must answer) and locates the view in a de-theologized process lineage (Whitehead, Schelling, Teilhard). It is offered as a research programme, evaluated by a generative criterion rather than by falsifiability. New in version 1.0: the serial reversal (one lit point at a time); the de-experientialization of the cosmic One (an inexperienceable topology); time as a quasi-stable block in motion with non-chronological traversal; the displacement of the central frontier onto the metric of qualitative proximity, here named as a research programme and given a first articulation; and a recorded independent, non-philosophical convergence on the view's central image.
Etienne MOUROT-GINESTIERE (Sun,) studied this question.