▶ Minds Built Between Us 01 — The Body Predicts Before You Do ▶ Minds Built Between Us 02 — When Signals Become Rules ▶ Minds Built Between Us 03 — Communication Inherits the Model ▶ Minds Built Between Us 04 — The Environment Votes ▶ Minds Built Between Us 05 — When the Model Locks In ▶ Minds Built Between Us 06 — Installing Revision Points ▶ Minds Built Between Us 07 — This Never Stays in Childhood ▶ Minds Built Between Us 08 — Perception Is a Controlled Guess ▶ Minds Built Between Us 09 — Error Is the Engine ▶ Minds Built Between Us 10 — When Error Is Suppressed ▶ Minds Built Between Us 11 — Other Minds as Predictive Environments ▶ Minds Built Between Us 12 — How Mutual Modeling Creates IdentityMinds Built Between Us — Index
Before reflection, before language, before identity — the body is already modeling the world.
Repeated early experiences compress into predictive rules that shape perception long before conscious reasoning appears.
Early predictive calibration does not remain internal; it shapes how communication is interpreted and produced.
Predictive rules persist because environments reinforce them. Stability is selected through feedback.
Predictive systems narrow over time. What once formed as flexible calibration can harden into constraint.
Predictive systems require structured disruption to remain adaptive. Revision does not occur spontaneously.
Early predictive calibration continues to shape adult perception, identity, and institutional behavior.
Perception is not raw input processing but active prediction constrained by sensory feedback.
Prediction error drives learning, adaptation, and model refinement within predictive systems.
Suppressing prediction error preserves short-term stability but produces long-term rigidity and distortion.
Social interaction extends prediction beyond the individual organism.
Identity emerges through repeated reciprocal prediction between individuals.
Translated from English ; minor errors may occur.