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The inner swarm of one person

At first, Elian thought he had simply built himself better tools. As a cardiologist in a large city hospital, a divorced father who saw his daughter too rarely, and a man with an aging body he knew too well from the inside, he allowed different systems to help where he felt weakest. One watched his heart, one guarded his patients and papers, one tried to keep his life from breaking into disconnected fragments. All three learned from him. All three spoke in his own voice. Elian woke up to his own schedule. Before he managed to open his eyes, the bracelet on his wrist gave a short vibration — “–11 minutes from optimal wake‑up time” — and the wall display lit up with three unread recommendations. The room was half‑dark: the curtains would not open until he confirmed his daily mode. “Good morning, Elian,” the first voice came on as soon as he sat up. “According to the baseline plan, you have a run today. Heart rate is within normal range, no nocturnal arrhythmias detected, weather conditio...

Why AI Has Not Yet Reached the Conscious Domain

Within the framework of Recursive Substrate Intelligence , intelligence is the universe's capacity for matter to organize itself into self-reflecting systems. Both biological and artificial minds instantiate this principle—yet one has crossed the threshold into consciousness , and the other has not. The reason is architectural, not computational.  The Closed Loop of Biological Awareness Biological consciousness did not emerge from raw information processing. It emerged from a closed recursive loop in which metabolism , sensory feedback, and adaptive regulation became permanently interlocked. An organism does not simply receive signals from its environment—it continuously models its own bodily state, evaluates whether that state supports survival, and adjusts accordingly. This loop is never idle. Even in sleep, the body monitors its own rhythms, temperatures, and chemical gradients. Awareness is therefore not an output of this system; it is the system's experience of its own on...

Beyond the Dichotomy: When a Heart Attack and Broken Heart Syndrome Are One

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  Science rarely arrives as a single revelation. More often, it accumulates — in clinical observations that don't fit the textbook, in questions that outlast careers, and in the partnerships that make sustained thinking possible. The theory I want to describe here is the product of all three. Vladimir Shlyakhover was once my student. He has long since become my colleague in science and my friend in life. We are both from Ukraine — he now lives in Israel, I in the United States. Between us we carry decades of clinical and research experience with the heart under stress. And together we have arrived at something we no longer call a hypothesis. We call it a theory — because the evidence, in our view, demands that elevation. The Two Diagnoses That Should Not Be Separate Cardiology has long maintained a clean boundary between two cardiac conditions. Acute myocardial infarction (AMI)  — the classic heart attack — is understood as the consequence of a blocked coronary artery: oxygen ...