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Working Papers Advancing a Biocognitive Framework Linking Meaning-Making, Neural Regulation, and Biological Aging
Biocognitive Papers
on Meaning and Longevity
This series presents conceptual and empirical working papers exploring the role of meaning-making in biological aging. Papers are published as a numbered sequence, documenting the progressive development of a biocognitive framework integrating neural regulation, psychological organization, and glycomic biomarkers in the study of longevity.
Released to extend scientific inquiry beyond conventional publication constraints, the series will evolve as new empirical findings and theoretical refinements emerge.
Working Papers
No. 1 Epistemic Monopoly and the Architecture of Taught Fear
From Cultural Admonition to Outliership: Reclaiming Time as Affordance Beyond the Portals of Age
A reflection on how culture teaches us to fear time—and how reclaiming our individuality as lived meaning allows us to move beyond those limits.
No. 2 From Neuromaps to Meaning: Contextual Duration, Feedforward, Biocognition, and the Limits of Artificial Intelligence
This essay explores why human meaning, lived experience, and context cannot be fully reproduced by artificial intelligence. It argues that intelligence is more than data processing—it is shaped by embodiment, history, and the way humans experience time and meaning.
No. 3 Entering Finitude: A Teachable Cosmology of Mortality, Imperfection, and Human Expansion
Neither science nor theology provides conclusive evidence regarding ultimate reality, as both rely on unprovable assumptions. The individual is therefore tasked not with discovering a definitive cosmology, but with constructing one that is cognitively coherent, emotionally viable, and durationally stable.
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