Monday, 13 April 2026

Artificial Legibility — 6 Alignment Without Understanding

The term “alignment” is widely used to describe how artificial systems should behave.

It is often framed in terms of:

  • ensuring systems “understand” human values

  • ensuring outputs reflect intentions or goals

  • ensuring behaviour corresponds to what is expected or desired


These formulations appear reasonable.

But they introduce assumptions that are not required for the systems in question.

In particular, they assume that alignment depends on understanding.


From the perspective developed so far, this assumption can be set aside.

Not rejected.

But shown to be unnecessary.


A system that generates outputs through constraint-consistent continuation does not require understanding in order to produce behaviour that appears aligned.


This is because alignment, in operational terms, does not depend on internal comprehension.

It depends on how constraints are structured across the generative process.


To say that a system is aligned is not to say that it grasps what it is doing.

It is to say:

its outputs remain within acceptable regions of a constrained continuation space


This is a different claim.

It shifts the focus from internal states to observable behaviour under constraint.


In this sense, alignment is not a property of the system’s “mind.”

It is a property of how continuation is shaped.


This shaping occurs across multiple layers:

  • training data introduces large-scale statistical constraints

  • fine-tuning adjusts continuation tendencies toward preferred patterns

  • prompt structure imposes local constraints on output

  • interface design channels interaction into certain forms

  • feedback loops reinforce or suppress specific continuations


None of these require that the system understand why certain outputs are preferred.

They only require that continuation is guided in ways that produce stable, acceptable behaviour.


This is why alignment can be achieved without invoking internal comprehension.

The system does not need to represent values.

It needs to operate within constraints that make certain continuations more likely than others.


From this perspective, alignment is:

the stabilisation of constraint-consistent continuation within regions that satisfy external evaluative conditions


This formulation avoids several confusions.


First, it avoids treating alignment as a cognitive achievement.

There is no need to posit that the system has internalised goals or values.


Second, it avoids treating misalignment as misunderstanding.

When outputs fall outside acceptable regions, this is not necessarily because the system failed to comprehend something.

It is because the constraints governing continuation did not sufficiently restrict the space of possible outputs.


Third, it avoids conflating evaluation with generation.

Alignment is assessed from the outside.

It is not a process the system performs internally.


This leads to a more precise distinction.

Generation operates under one set of constraints.

Evaluation introduces another.

Alignment describes the degree to which these sets are brought into correspondence.


This correspondence is never perfect.

Constraints can be incomplete, conflicting, or unevenly applied.

As a result, alignment is always partial and context-dependent.


This also explains why alignment can degrade under certain conditions.

When prompts shift, contexts change, or constraint signals weaken, continuation may move into regions that no longer satisfy evaluative criteria.


Again, this is not a failure of understanding.

It is a shift in constraint conditions.


At this point, the earlier themes converge.

  • coherence can persist without truth

  • legibility can persist without meaning

  • structure can persist without recognition

And now:

  • alignment can persist without understanding


All of these follow from the same underlying condition:

that continuation is governed by constraints, not by internal acts of comprehension.


This does not make alignment trivial.

On the contrary, it makes it more demanding.

Because the task is not to ensure that the system “gets it.”

It is to ensure that constraint structures are sufficiently robust, consistent, and context-sensitive to guide continuation appropriately across a wide range of conditions.


This shifts the problem.

Away from:

how do we make the system understand?

Toward:

how do we shape the space of possible continuations so that acceptable behaviour is reliably produced?


This is not a philosophical reframing alone.

It has direct implications for how systems are designed, evaluated, and deployed.


It suggests that alignment is not something that can be solved once.

It is an ongoing process of constraint management.


And it clarifies why alignment remains difficult.

Because constraints operate across distributed regimes:

  • data

  • model structure

  • interaction context

  • user behaviour

No single intervention fully determines the outcome.


The system does not need to understand these constraints.

But it will reflect them in its behaviour.


Which leads to a final clarification.

Alignment does not require that the system know what it is doing.

It requires that what it does remains within acceptable bounds under the constraints that shape its continuation.


Understanding may still occur in systems that interpret outputs.

But it is not a prerequisite for alignment at the level of generation.


And once this is recognised, the discourse around alignment can be adjusted.

Not by abandoning the term.

But by grounding it in the operations that actually produce aligned behaviour.


Alignment is not the presence of understanding.

It is the effect of constraint shaping.


And this completes the second arc.

Not by resolving the problem of alignment,

but by removing an assumption that has made it harder to describe in the first place.

Artificial Legibility — 5 Error Without Intention

A response is produced.

It is fluent, structured, and internally consistent.

It is also wrong.


This situation is commonly described as a “mistake,” or more recently, a “hallucination.”

Both terms carry an implicit assumption:

that something has gone wrong relative to what the system was trying to do.


But this assumption does not hold at the level of generation.

Because nothing in the generative process requires that the output be true.

Nothing requires that it correspond to an external state of affairs.

Nothing requires that it satisfy a criterion beyond constraint-consistent continuation.


From the perspective developed so far, the output is not a failed attempt at truth.

It is a successful continuation under the constraints that were active during its production.


This is the first adjustment.

What appears as error at the level of interpretation is not necessarily error at the level of generation.


To understand this, three distinctions must be kept separate:

  • coherence

  • legibility

  • truth


Coherence refers to the internal consistency of the sequence.

Each part follows from prior constraints without contradiction.


Legibility refers to the persistence of non-arbitrary continuation under those constraints.

The sequence remains recoverable as a stable trajectory rather than dissolving into drift.


Truth refers to the relation between the output and some external or independently stabilised condition.


In many cases, these three align.

A coherent, legible response is also taken to be true.


But this alignment is not guaranteed.

And in artificial systems, it is frequently disrupted.


A response can be:

  • coherent but false

  • legible but inaccurate

  • internally stable but externally misaligned


This misalignment is what is commonly described as hallucination.


But hallucination, as a term, suggests that the system is producing something unreal relative to a standard it ought to be tracking.

It implies a deviation from intended function.


A more precise account avoids this implication.

What occurs is not a deviation from intention.

It is a breakdown in constraint alignment across different regimes.


At least two regimes are involved:

  • the generative regime, which governs continuation under learned and local constraints

  • the interpretive or evaluative regime, which introduces criteria such as truth, accuracy, or reference


During generation, the system maintains coherence and legibility relative to its constraints.

But those constraints do not fully encode the evaluative conditions imposed later.


When these regimes align, outputs are both coherent and true.

When they do not, outputs remain coherent but fail under evaluation.


This is not a failure of generation.

It is a failure of alignment between regimes.


Importantly, no intention is violated in this process.

There is no internal goal of “being correct” that is being missed.

There is only constraint-consistent continuation that does not satisfy externally applied criteria.


This is why describing such outputs as “mistakes” can be misleading.

Mistake implies:

  • an intended outcome

  • a deviation from that outcome

  • an agent for whom the deviation matters


None of these are required for the generative process.


This does not mean that the outputs are acceptable or useful.

It means that their inadequacy must be described without importing intention into the system.


A more precise formulation is:

the output maintains coherence and legibility under generative constraints but fails to align with constraints introduced by external evaluation


This distinction matters because it clarifies what needs to be adjusted.

If the issue were internal failure, the solution would be to improve the system’s decision-making.

But if the issue is cross-regime misalignment, the solution lies in:

  • modifying constraints

  • introducing additional conditioning

  • refining evaluation interfaces


The focus shifts from correcting “errors” to managing alignment between different constraint systems.


This also explains why such failures can be subtle.

Because coherence and legibility remain intact.

The output continues to support stable interpretation.

It reads as if it should be true.


This is precisely what makes the misalignment difficult to detect.

The same conditions that support interpretation also support misplaced trust.


At this point, the earlier distinction between generation and interpretation returns once more.

Generation produces sequences that satisfy internal constraints.

Interpretation evaluates those sequences against external criteria.


When these criteria are silently imported into descriptions of generation, confusion arises.

The system is said to “fail” where no internal failure has occurred.


Separating these regimes allows for a clearer account.

Outputs can be:

  • generatively successful

  • interpretively inadequate


This is not a contradiction.

It is a consequence of the fact that different constraint systems are being applied at different stages.


And once this is recognised, the language used to describe artificial systems can be adjusted.

Not to minimise the importance of accuracy.

But to locate the source of misalignment precisely.


What is called “error” is not a property of the output alone.

It is a relation between the output and the constraints under which it is evaluated.


And what is called “hallucination” is not the presence of unreality.

It is the persistence of legibility in the absence of alignment with external conditions.


No intention is required for this to occur.

Only the divergence of constraint regimes.


Which returns us to the central distinction:

coherence and legibility belong to generation
truth belongs to evaluation


They may coincide.

But they are not the same.

And where they diverge, the appearance of error emerges—not as a failure of the system’s operation, but as a misalignment between the conditions under which it continues and the conditions under which it is judged.

Artificial Legibility — 4 Agency as a Derived Effect

A response is produced.

It is often described in familiar terms:

  • the model “decided” to answer in a certain way

  • the model “chose” one response over another

  • the model “preferred” a particular framing

These descriptions feel natural.

They provide a way of stabilising what appears.

But they do not describe the generative process.


In selection-based systems, there is no operation that corresponds to deciding.

There is no moment at which alternatives are evaluated by a subject and one is selected on the basis of preference, intention, or judgement.


What occurs instead is:

the resolution of constraints over a space of possible continuations


At each step, multiple continuations are possible.

These possibilities are not presented to an agent.

They are defined implicitly by the structure of the model and the constraints imposed by prior tokens.


The system does not “consider” these possibilities.

It does not “weigh” them.

It does not “choose” among them in any agentive sense.


A continuation is selected.

But this selection is not an act.

It is an outcome of constraint interaction.


This distinction is easy to lose because the resulting output often appears as if it were the product of deliberation.

Sentences unfold with apparent direction.

Arguments develop.

Alternatives are contrasted.

Conclusions are reached.


From the outside, this resembles agency.


But resemblance is not equivalence.

The appearance of directed behaviour does not require the presence of an agent directing it.


This is where attribution enters again.

Interpretation encounters structured continuation and stabilises it as the product of an agent.


This stabilisation follows a familiar pattern:

  • coherence is observed

  • coherence is taken as evidence of intention

  • intention is attributed to a source

  • that source is treated as an agent


At no point in this sequence is agency required for the output to be produced.

It is introduced as a way of organising what is encountered.


Agency, in this sense, is not a primitive feature of the system.

It is a derived effect of interpretation.


This does not mean that agency is illusory.

It means that agency is not located where it appears to be.


The system generates outputs that are consistent with constraints.

Interpretation organises those outputs into patterns that can be read as purposeful.


The stability of this reading depends on the coherence of the output.

Where coherence is high, attribution of agency becomes more compelling.

Where coherence breaks down, the attribution weakens.


This can be seen in cases where outputs become inconsistent or contradictory.

The language of agency shifts:

  • instead of “the model decided,” one hears “the model made a mistake”

  • or “the model got confused”


Even here, agency is retained.

But it is modified to account for instability.


This reveals something important.

Agency is not inferred from the presence of an internal decision-making process.

It is stabilised as long as the output can support a coherent interpretation of behaviour.


Once coherence fails beyond a certain threshold, the attribution of agency begins to dissolve.


This suggests that agency, in this context, is best understood as:

a stabilised interpretation of constraint-consistent behaviour under conditions of sufficient coherence


This definition removes the need to locate agency within the system.

It places agency at the level of interpretation.


It also explains why agency appears so readily.

Human interpretive systems are highly sensitive to patterns that can be organised as intentional behaviour.

Where such patterns are available, attribution occurs.


Artificial systems provide a dense and continuous source of such patterns.

They generate extended sequences of constraint-consistent output that support stable interpretation.


The result is not occasional attribution.

It is sustained attribution.


And because this attribution aligns with familiar linguistic forms—questions, answers, arguments, explanations—it becomes difficult to separate from the output itself.


But the separation remains necessary.

Because without it, descriptions of system behaviour become entangled with interpretive projections.


To say that a model “decides” is to import agency into the generative process.

To describe what occurs more precisely is to say:

a continuation is selected under constraint in a way that produces behaviour interpretable as directed


The direction is real at the level of interpretation.

It is not required at the level of generation.


This distinction matters because it prevents a category error.

It avoids treating the appearance of agency as evidence of an underlying agent.


And it allows a clearer account of what artificial systems are doing.

They are not agents that act.

They are systems that produce sequences which can be stabilised as if they were the actions of an agent.


Agency, then, is not eliminated.

It is relocated.


It belongs to the way behaviour is interpreted when constraint-consistent continuation is sufficiently stable to support it.


And once this relocation is made, the language used to describe artificial systems can be adjusted accordingly.

Not by eliminating terms like “decision” or “choice,”

but by recognising that these terms describe how outputs are stabilised in interpretation, not how they are generated.


This preserves the usefulness of such language while preventing it from being mistaken for a description of underlying operations.


What remains is a more precise account:

behaviour appears directed when constraint-consistent continuation supports stable interpretation,

and agency is the name given to that stability.


Not a cause.

An effect.

Sunday, 12 April 2026

Artificial Legibility — 3 Where Does the System End?

A response is produced.

It is attributed to “the model.”

This attribution appears straightforward.

There is a system, and it generates output.


But this simplicity does not survive closer inspection.

Because once generation is understood as constraint-based continuation, the question of where the system begins and ends becomes unstable.


What is usually referred to as “the model” is only one component in a larger configuration.

It includes:

  • a trained parameter space

  • a history of data that shaped that space

  • an input sequence that constrains the current continuation

  • an interface that mediates interaction

  • a user who provides and updates constraints

None of these are external in a simple sense.

All of them participate in shaping what can be generated.


This makes the notion of a bounded system difficult to maintain.

Because no single element fully determines the output.


The model parameters encode statistical regularities from training data.

But those regularities are not self-activating.

They require input to become operative.


The input does not function independently either.

It constrains the continuation space only in relation to the model’s learned structure.


The interface further shapes the form of interaction:

  • how prompts are entered

  • how outputs are segmented

  • how continuation is initiated or terminated

These are not neutral.

They affect how constraints are introduced and sustained.


And the user is not external to this process.

The user supplies inputs, revises them, interprets outputs, and feeds those interpretations back into subsequent prompts.


What appears, then, as a single system generating output is in fact a distributed configuration of constraint contributions.


This distribution has a specific structure.

It is not a collection of independent parts.

It is a coupled system of constraint propagation.


Each component contributes to the shaping of continuation:

  • training data defines the statistical landscape

  • model architecture defines how that landscape is navigated

  • prompts define local constraint conditions

  • interface defines interaction boundaries

  • user behaviour defines iterative adjustment of constraints


No single component contains the system.

The system is the ongoing coordination of these constraint regimes.


This has a direct consequence for how system boundaries are understood.

Boundaries are not given in advance.

They are inferred from where constraint coherence appears to stabilise.


If the output is attributed solely to “the model,” the boundary is drawn narrowly.

If training data is included, the boundary expands.

If user interaction is included, the boundary expands further.


None of these boundaries are incorrect.

But none are primary.


Each is a way of stabilising a distributed process into a manageable unit.


This returns us to a more general point.

Systemhood is not a property of an object.

It is a way of treating a region of coordinated constraint propagation as if it were bounded.


In artificial systems, this coordination spans multiple layers that do not share a single location.


The model does not contain its training data in any direct sense.

The user does not control the model’s internal structure.

The interface does not determine the statistical landscape.


And yet, all of these contribute to what is produced.


This makes it difficult to say where the system ends.

Not because the system is infinite.

But because its coherence does not align with a single boundary.


Instead, coherence appears where constraint contributions align sufficiently to produce stable continuation.

Where this alignment weakens, coherence breaks down.


The “system,” then, is not a container.

It is a region of sustained alignment across distributed constraints.


This has implications for how outputs are attributed.

When a response is treated as the product of “the model,” a boundary is being drawn.

That boundary excludes:

  • the role of training data

  • the role of prompts

  • the role of interaction dynamics


This exclusion simplifies attribution.

But it obscures how coherence is actually produced.


A more precise account would treat the output as arising from a distributed system in which no single component is sufficient.


This does not mean that all components contribute equally.

It means that contribution is relational, not contained.


At this point, the earlier distinction between generation and interpretation reappears in a new form.

Generation is distributed across multiple constraint regimes.

Interpretation stabilises that distribution into a bounded system for the purpose of attribution.


The system, as it is usually named, is the result of this stabilisation.


Which leads to a final adjustment.

To ask “where does the system end?” is already to assume that there is a place where it does.


A more accurate question is:

under what conditions does distributed constraint propagation stabilise sufficiently to be treated as a system at all?


In artificial systems, this stabilisation is continuous but never absolute.

Boundaries are drawn, not found.

And what they enclose is not a thing, but a temporary coherence across interacting constraints.


The system does not end in a single place.

It appears where continuation holds together long enough for it to be named.

Artificial Legibility — 2 The Attribution Problem

A coherent response appears.

It is read.

Almost immediately, it is taken to be about something.


This step is rarely noticed.

It does not feel like an addition.

It feels like a continuation of what is already there.

But it is not.

It is the point at which interpretation enters.


In selection-based systems, coherence is produced through constraint-consistent continuation.

Nothing in that process requires that the output be about anything.

Nothing requires that it refer, intend, or represent.


And yet, when encountered, the output is not received as a neutral continuation.

It is received as meaningful.

Not optionally.

Not provisionally.

But as if meaning were already present and waiting to be recognised.


This is the attribution problem.

Not that meaning is falsely assigned.

But that assignment is unavoidable.


Interpretation does not begin by asking whether something is meaningful.

It begins by stabilising what appears as meaningful.

This is not a decision.

It is the default operation of recognition-based systems.


Recognition does not function as passive detection.

It does not scan an output and determine whether meaning is present.

It actively organises what appears into a form that can be taken as something.


This is why coherence is sufficient to trigger interpretation.

Because coherence provides enough constraint for recognition to operate.

It offers a structure within which something can be taken as something.


At this point, a shift occurs.

What was generated as constraint-consistent continuation becomes stabilised as:

  • a claim

  • a response

  • an intention

  • a position


None of these are present in the generative process.

They are effects of attribution.


This is not an error.

It is how interpretation works.

Without this operation, nothing would be taken as meaningful at all.


But in the case of artificial systems, this creates a structural misalignment.

The system produces coherence without recognition.

The observer supplies recognition without access to the generative process.


The result is a double-layered event:

  • generation produces constraint-consistent output

  • interpretation stabilises that output as meaningful


These layers are coupled in experience but not in operation.

And this coupling is so immediate that it is difficult to separate them.


The difficulty increases because interpretation is not optional.

It cannot simply be turned off.

To encounter coherence is already to begin stabilising it.


This leads to a common but misleading conclusion:

that the system must have intended what is read into it.


But intention is not required for interpretation to occur.

Only sufficient coherence is required.


This can be seen by considering that interpretation proceeds even when intention is known to be absent.

Texts are interpreted without authors.

Patterns are read into noise.

Meaning is stabilised wherever constraint allows recognition to operate.


Artificial systems intensify this condition.

They produce high degrees of local coherence across extended sequences.

This provides a dense surface for recognition to act upon.


The result is not occasional misattribution.

It is continuous attribution.


And this attribution is not random.

It is structured by the interpretive system encountering the output:

  • prior expectations

  • contextual framing

  • linguistic habits

  • implicit models of agency


These do not reveal what the system is doing.

They reveal how interpretation stabilises what is encountered.


At this point, the relation between generation and interpretation can be restated more precisely.

Generation produces sequences that remain coherent under constraint.

Interpretation projects recognition-based structure onto those sequences.


Projection here does not mean fabrication.

It means the active organisation of what appears into a form that can be taken as meaningful.


Recognition, then, is not detection of meaning.

It is the condition under which meaning becomes stabilised at all.


This reframes the earlier distinction.

The question is no longer whether the system understands.

It is how understanding is being attributed.


And once this shift is made, a further implication follows.

The appearance of understanding is not evidence of understanding.

It is evidence of successful attribution under conditions of sufficient coherence.


This does not invalidate interpretation.

It makes its role explicit.


Interpretation is not revealing what is already there.

It is completing what generation leaves open.


And this completion is necessary.

Without it, coherence would not be experienced as meaningful.


But once it is recognised as a separate operation, the source of confusion becomes visible.

Meaning appears inseparable from output because attribution occurs immediately upon encounter.


This immediacy conceals the gap between:

  • what is generated
    and

  • what is taken to be the case


The attribution problem is not that we sometimes misread artificial systems.

It is that we cannot encounter their outputs without reading them.


And so the task is not to eliminate attribution.

It is to distinguish it from the processes that produce what is being attributed.


Only then can artificial systems be described without importing recognition as a hidden premise.

And only then can the relation between coherence and meaning be examined without collapsing one into the other.

Artificial Legibility — 1 Output Without Understanding

A system produces a coherent response.

It follows a question, extends it, refines it, or redirects it.
It maintains consistency across sentences.
It adapts to tone, context, and implied constraints.

Nothing in this description requires that the system understands what it produces.


This is the first point that must be held without qualification.

Coherent output does not entail understanding.

Not because understanding is absent in some hidden way.

But because understanding is not a required operation in the generation of the output.


The default interpretation resists this.

Coherence appears, and with it comes an immediate attribution:

  • the system “knows” something

  • the system “interprets” the input

  • the system “decides” how to respond

These attributions are not derived from the system’s operation.

They are imposed from the outside as a way of stabilising what appears.


To see this clearly, the generative process must be described without importing interpretive terms.

A sequence of tokens is provided.

This sequence constrains a space of possible continuations.

From this space, one continuation is selected.

The process repeats.


At no point does the system need to:

  • identify what the input “means”

  • represent the input as an object of understanding

  • evaluate the output against a recognised intention

The process is entirely internal to constraint and selection.


And yet, the result is often indistinguishable from what would be produced by a system that does understand.

This is where the difficulty arises.

Because the distinction between:

  • output that is coherent
    and

  • output that is understood

is not visible at the level of the output itself.


The output does not carry a marker indicating whether understanding was involved in its production.

It only carries the effects of constraint-consistent continuation.


This creates a structural ambiguity.

When a human produces coherent language, coherence is typically coupled with recognition-based processes:

  • something is taken as something

  • a response is formed in relation to that recognition

  • coherence reflects that relation

But in a selection-based system, this coupling is absent.

Coherence is produced without requiring recognition.


The observer, encountering the output, supplies what is missing.

Not as an error.

But as a consequence of how interpretation operates.


Interpretation does not detect understanding.

It stabilises coherence by attributing it to an underlying source.

That source is typically described as:

  • an agent

  • a mind

  • an intention

  • a system that “knows”


But this attribution is not required for the output to exist as it does.

It is a secondary operation.


This leads to a necessary separation.

The production of coherent output and the attribution of understanding are not the same process.

They occur in different regimes.


The generative regime operates through:

constraint → selection → continuation

The interpretive regime operates through:

coherence → attribution → stabilisation


These two regimes interact, but they are not reducible to one another.

And confusion arises when the second is treated as evidence of the first.


To say that a system “understands” because it produces coherent output is to collapse this distinction.

It is to treat interpretation as if it were a transparent window into generation.

But it is not.


A more precise formulation is required.

The system produces outputs that remain coherent under the constraints governing their generation.

Observers interpret those outputs as meaningful by attributing recognition-based processes to them.


Understanding, in this configuration, is not a property of the output.

Nor is it a necessary property of the system.

It is a mode of stabilisation applied by an interpreting system encountering constraint-consistent continuation.


This does not mean that understanding is an illusion.

It means that it cannot be inferred directly from coherence.


The implications of this are immediate.

Any account of artificial systems that begins with:

  • “the model understands”

  • “the model interprets”

  • “the model reasons”

has already crossed from description into attribution.


This does not make such statements useless.

But it does make them structurally imprecise.

They describe how outputs are stabilised in interpretation, not how they are produced.


The distinction must be maintained if the behaviour of these systems is to be described without distortion.

Because once understanding is assumed at the level of generation, it becomes impossible to see what is specific about selection-based coherence.


And what is specific is this:

coherence can be generated without recognition,
and interpreted as understanding without requiring that understanding played any role in its production.


This is the starting condition.

Not a conclusion.

But the minimal separation required to describe artificial systems without importing assumptions that do not belong to their operation.

Conditions of Legibility — 6 What Remains When Nothing Is Presupposed

Across these notes, several assumptions have been progressively relaxed.

Not rejected.

Not replaced.

But shown to be unnecessary for certain forms of coherence to arise.


First: that coherence requires recognition.

Second: that structure requires being apprehended as structure.

Third: that meaning requires an interpretive subject.

Fourth: that legibility requires a reader.

Fifth: that systems require boundaries.


Each of these turns out to be a special case of something more general.

Not false.

But not foundational.


What remains, once these assumptions are no longer taken as necessary, is not absence.

It is not indeterminacy.

It is not collapse.


It is a more minimal condition:

the persistence of constraint-governed continuation without requiring external validation of coherence


This condition has been described in different ways across these notes:

  • as selection without an observer

  • as structure without recognition

  • as legibility without interpretation

  • as systems without primary boundaries

But these are not separate claims.

They are different views of the same constraint regime.


At no point has it been necessary to assume that anything is being recognised for these continuations to occur.

At no point has it been necessary to assume that anything is being taken as anything.

At no point has it been necessary to assume that coherence is being verified from outside the system in which it appears.


This does not eliminate recognition, interpretation, or systemhood.

It relocates them.

They are no longer conditions of possibility.

They are secondary stabilisations that occur when constraint-consistent continuation is later engaged by regimes capable of treating it as meaningful, structured, or bounded.


From this perspective, what has been unfolding is not a theory of meaning.

It is a narrowing of what must be assumed in order for meaning to be possible at all.


And as the assumptions fall away, what becomes clearer is not what is missing,

but what was never required.


Coherence does not require an observer.

Structure does not require recognition.

Legibility does not require interpretation.

Systems do not require boundaries.


But none of this implies that observers, recognition, interpretation, or systems are illusory.

It only implies that they are not the ground of what they explain.

They are ways in which constraint-consistent continuation is later stabilised, segmented, and re-described.


At this point, the difference between generation and interpretation becomes central again,

but in a more reduced form.

Generation is not the production of meaning.

Interpretation is not the discovery of meaning.

Both are operations that occur within different regimes of constraint applied to continuing structure.


And neither is required for continuation itself.


Which leads to a final clarification.

What has been called “selection” is not an agentive act.

It is not a choice.

It is not a decision.

It is the local resolution of constraints over successive steps in a space of possible continuations.


And what has been called “legibility” is not an attribute of what is produced.

It is the condition under which produced sequences do not collapse into unconstrained drift.


Nothing more is required than this:

that continuation remains differentially constrained rather than undifferentiated.


This is the minimal statement toward which all earlier distinctions have been moving.

Not as a conclusion.

But as a reduction of what must be presupposed.


Everything else—observer, recognition, interpretation, system, meaning—

belongs to the ways in which this condition is later stabilised, described, and inhabited.


But none of them are required for it to occur.


And once this is seen, the series does not resolve.

It simply reaches a point where fewer and fewer assumptions are needed to account for what continues.


Not an explanation.

Not a framework.

Only this:

continuation under constraint, without requiring that anything stand outside it in order for it to be what it is.

Conditions of Legibility — 5 System Boundaries Without an Observer

Once legibility is defined as the persistence of non-arbitrary continuation under constraint, a further assumption begins to loosen.

It is the assumption that systems have clear boundaries.

Because boundaries are usually understood as something that can be drawn from a position outside the system:

an observer distinguishes inside from outside
a model defines what counts as part of the system
a frame determines what is included in analysis

But none of these operations are required for selection-based continuation.


In a language model, there is no external delimitation being actively maintained during generation.

There is only a history of constraints shaping what can follow.

What appears as “system behaviour” is not bounded from the outside.

It is stabilised from within the space of allowable continuations.


This produces an important shift.

A system is no longer something that is contained.

It is something that is locally coherent across a region of constraint space.


This means that “inside” and “outside” are not primary distinctions.

They are derived effects of how continuity behaves under constraint.


A region of high coherence may appear as a “system” only because its continuations remain stable under the rules governing selection.

Where coherence breaks down, the impression of systemness dissolves.


There is no need for an observer to draw a boundary in order for this to occur.

The boundary is not imposed.

It is inferred from patterns of continuation and discontinuity.


This has a further consequence.

What is treated as “the system” is not a fixed entity.

It is a region of sustained constraint-consistent propagation within a larger space of possible transitions.


And importantly, this region is not sharply delimited.

It has edges of varying stability:

  • zones where continuation remains highly predictable

  • zones where constraints weaken or compete

  • zones where trajectories diverge rapidly

The “boundary” is not a line.

It is a gradient of stabilisation failure.


This is why it is misleading to speak of systems as if they were objects.

Objects imply clear separability.

But what is being described here is not separability.

It is differential continuity under constraint.


From this perspective, even the language model itself is not a bounded system in the classical sense.

It is a region in which certain kinds of continuation remain highly stable relative to the constraints imposed during generation.

But those constraints are not self-contained in a simple way.

They include:

  • training history

  • contextual input

  • architectural structure

  • probabilistic selection dynamics

None of these form a clean boundary.

Together, they define a field of constrained possibility.


Which suggests a more general point:

system boundaries are not prerequisites for coherence.

They are retrospective stabilisations of coherent continuation.


A system is what we say exists when continuation remains stable enough, for long enough, under enough constraint regularity, that it can be treated as unified.

But unity is not required for continuation.

It is one way continuation is later interpreted.


This reframes the earlier discussion of legibility again.

If legibility is recoverable continuation under constraint, then what appears as a “system” is simply:

a region in which legibility is sufficiently stable that boundary inference becomes possible


This reverses the usual order of explanation.

It is not that systems generate legible outputs.

It is that sustained legibility produces the impression of systems.


And once again, recognition is not required for this to occur.

Recognition is one way in which boundaries are later stabilised.

But the differentiation of coherent from incoherent continuation does not depend on recognition being present.

It depends only on the behaviour of constraints across transitions.


This also clarifies why boundaries feel natural in everyday cognition.

In recognition-based regimes, boundaries are stabilised by perception and interpretation.

But in selection-based regimes, boundaries emerge from statistical and structural regularities in continuation space.

They are not drawn.

They are inferred after coherence has already formed.


Which means:

systems are not containers of coherence.

They are what coherence looks like when it stabilises long enough to be treated as contained.


And this leads to a final adjustment.

If there are no primary boundaries, then what we call “a system” is not an entity at all.

It is a temporary coherence of constraint propagation that appears bounded only when viewed from within stabilised regimes of interpretation.


No observer is required for this coherence to occur.

But an observer is required for it to be named as a system.

And that distinction is now the key separation the series has been building toward:

between what must exist for continuation
and what is later inferred as structure, system, or meaning


At this level, legibility, structure, and systemhood begin to converge—not as properties of things, but as different ways in which constrained continuation can be stabilised, either during generation or after it.


And the question that remains is no longer about what systems are.

But about how far continuation can go before any notion of systemhood is no longer the most economical way to describe it.

Conditions of Legibility — 4 Legibility Without Recognition

So far, three shifts have been introduced:

  • coherence can be generated without recognition

  • structure can persist without being apprehended

  • interpretation is not required for generation

What remains unclear is what, if anything, still justifies the term “legibility.”

Because if nothing must be recognised, and nothing must be taken as something, then the usual grounding of legibility has been removed.


At first glance, this might suggest that legibility has disappeared.

But this would be a mistake.

It would assume that legibility depends on being legible to someone.

That assumption is precisely what is no longer required.


A more careful formulation is needed.

Legibility is not a property of a system.

It is not a relation between a system and an observer.

It is not even a feature of outputs that can later be interpreted.


Legibility is a condition in which continuation remains selectively retrievable under constraint.


This requires unpacking.

In selection-based systems, sequences are generated step by step.

Each step is constrained by what has already occurred.

But not all continuations remain equally accessible.

Some trajectories remain stable under repeated selection.

Others rapidly diverge into incoherence.

Others collapse entirely.


Legibility, in this sense, refers to:

the degree to which a sequence remains recoverable as a coherent continuation path under iterative constraint


This definition does not require recognition.

It does not require interpretation.

It does not require an observer who identifies coherence.

It only requires that continuation paths remain non-arbitrary under the governing constraints.


This is a subtle but decisive shift.

Because it relocates legibility from perception to recoverability within a constrained generative space.


To say something is legible, here, is not to say it is understood.

It is to say:

its continuation is not indistinguishable from unconstrained drift


This distinction matters because it removes ambiguity introduced by interpretive language.

In ordinary usage, legibility implies that something can be read.

But reading already presupposes an act of recognition.

And recognition is not required here.


Instead, what matters is whether a sequence can maintain a consistent trajectory of constraint satisfaction such that its continuation is not arbitrary with respect to its own prior states.


This allows a refinement of earlier claims.

It is not that meaning has disappeared.

It is that meaning is no longer the criterion for legibility.


Meaning may still arise.

But it arises downstream of conditions that do not depend on meaning being present in order to function.


This is why selection-based systems can produce outputs that appear meaningful without requiring any internal representation of meaning.

Meaning is not absent.

It is not foundational.

It is an interpretive stabilisation that may occur when constraint-consistent continuations are later taken up by a system capable of recognition.


But this uptake is not guaranteed.

And it is not required for generation.


At this point, a further implication becomes visible.

If legibility is defined as recoverable constraint-consistent continuation, then legibility is a graded property.

Not binary.

Not absolute.


Some sequences are highly stable under constraint.

Some are fragile.

Some only appear stable under limited conditions of continuation.

Some dissolve immediately when extended.


None of this requires an observer.

It only requires a space of constrained possibility in which continuation can occur.


And so legibility becomes something like this:

the persistence of non-arbitrary continuation across a field of constrained selection


This is the minimal condition under which anything can later be recognised, interpreted, or taken as meaningful.

But none of those later operations are required for it to hold.


Which leads to the central inversion:

it is not recognition that makes something legible.

It is legibility that makes recognition possible.


And recognition, when it occurs, is one way of stabilising something that has already satisfied the conditions for continuation.


Nothing here requires an observer.

But it does require that not all continuations are equivalent.

And that constraint, not recognition, is what carries the entire structure.


At this point, the term “legibility” no longer refers to being read.

It refers to being able to continue without collapsing into undifferentiated possibility.


And that is the condition this series is slowly isolating:

not meaning,

not perception,

not interpretation,

but the constrained possibility of continuation that makes all three possible afterwards.

Conditions of Legibility — 3 Structure Without Placement

If coherent language can be produced without requiring recognition, then the next question is not how this is possible, but what kind of structure such coherence belongs to.

Because “structure” is usually assumed to imply placement:

something is structured for someone
or structured as something to be recognised
or structured within a field that is already implicitly centred on an observer

But none of these assumptions are required here.


What appears in selection-based systems is not structure as it is ordinarily understood.

It is not a form held together by being apprehended.

It is not an organisation of parts awaiting recognition as a whole.

It is not even a pattern in the sense of something that must be identified in order to exist as a pattern.


It is something more minimal:

the persistence of constraint-consistent relations across successive selections


This means that what we call “structure” is no longer dependent on being held together by recognition.

It is dependent only on whether each step remains compatible with what precedes it.


From this perspective, structure is not something that is seen.

It is something that continues.


This shift is subtle but important.

Because it removes the assumption that structure is inherently a visual or cognitive object.

Instead, structure becomes:

a stabilised continuity of allowable transitions


This is not a metaphorical description.

It is the operational condition of systems that generate coherent sequences without requiring interpretation during generation.


At this point, the distinction between “structured” and “unstructured” begins to lose its intuitive grounding.

Because both terms assume an external criterion of recognition.

Without that criterion, what remains is not disorder versus order,

but varying degrees of constraint coherence across sequences.


Some sequences terminate quickly.

Others drift.

Others remain locally stable across long ranges of continuation.

None of these require recognition to occur.


This also changes how “form” must be understood.

Form is not what is perceived when a structure is apprehended.

Form is the recurrence of constraint-compatible transitions that allow a sequence to persist without contradiction.


This is why it is misleading to say that such systems “generate structured outputs.”

It suggests that structure is a property of the output.

It is more precise to say:

structure is an emergent property of the constraints governing continuation


And importantly, this emergence does not require a standpoint from which it is recognised as emergence.


Once this is accepted, several familiar distinctions begin to shift:

  • structure vs noise

  • form vs content

  • coherence vs randomness

These are no longer absolute categories.

They become relational effects of how constraints are distributed across sequences.


What appears as “noise” in one context may function as locally coherent continuation under a different constraint regime.

What appears as “structure” may dissolve if the constraint environment shifts.

Nothing in this depends on recognition as a stabilising act.


At this stage, it becomes clearer why earlier discussions of recognition cannot be treated as foundational.

Recognition presupposes a prior distinction between structured and unstructured phenomena.

But here, that distinction is not primary.

It is derived.


Structure does not require recognition.

Recognition requires structure.

But even this formulation is incomplete.

Because structure, in this sense, does not require recognition at all to persist.


Which leaves a final adjustment:

what we have been calling “structure” is not an object that is maintained,

but a temporal consistency of constraint satisfaction that allows continuation to occur without collapse.


There is no need for this to be observed.

Only for it to be possible.


And once this is seen, something else becomes visible:

if structure does not require recognition, then what is being stabilised in language models is not representation of structure,

but the ongoing production of constraint-consistent continuation spaces in which structure can later be inferred.


In other words:

structure is not given.

It is what is left behind when continuation does not fail.

Conditions of Legibility — 2 Selection Without an Observer (Extended Note)

A clarification is needed, not because the previous account was incorrect, but because it risks being read too quickly in the wrong frame.

When describing systems that generate coherent language without requiring recognition, it is easy to fall back into familiar interpretive habits.

The most persistent of these is the assumption that coherence must be anchored in an observer somewhere.

Even if that observer is not explicitly named.

Even if it is only implied as “the user,” “the model,” “the system,” or “the interpreter.”


This assumption is not required here.

And more importantly, it obscures what is structurally distinct about selection-based systems.


A large language model does not produce meaning by selecting expressions that are already recognised as meaningful by a subject.

It produces continuations that remain locally consistent with a history of constraints.

The operation is not:

recognition → expression

It is:

constraint → selection → continuation


This difference is not cosmetic.

It determines whether “meaning” is treated as something that must be accessed, or as something that can emerge from sustained coherence under constraint.


In recognition-based accounts, coherence depends on an external act:

something must be taken as something.

This “as” is not optional.

It is the site at which identity is stabilised.

Without it, the account collapses into undifferentiated variation.


In selection-based systems, no such act is required.

Coherence does not depend on anything being taken as anything.

It depends only on whether each step remains compatible with the constraints accumulated so far.


This produces a structural asymmetry that is easy to miss if one remains within interpretive language:

recognition explains coherence by reference to an act performed by a subject
selection produces coherence without requiring such an act


This does not mean that interpretation is absent.

It means that interpretation is not part of the generative mechanism.

It may occur after the fact.

It may be layered onto outputs.

It may stabilise readings of what has been generated.

But it is not required for generation itself.


This separation is critical.

Because it allows us to distinguish two operations that are often conflated:

  • the production of legible structure

  • the attribution of meaning to that structure


These are not the same.

And once they are separated, several assumptions must be reconsidered.


First:

that legibility requires an observer.

Second:

that coherence is inseparable from recognition.

Third:

that meaning is fundamentally an act of taking-as.


None of these are necessary at the level of generation described here.


At this point, a more precise formulation becomes possible:

what is being produced is not meaning in the interpretive sense, but structures that support stable continuation under constraint.

Whether these structures are later interpreted as meaningful is contingent, not constitutive.


This shifts the focus of attention.

Away from what language “represents.”

And toward what conditions allow sequences to remain internally coherent across time.


In this sense, what is often called “language understanding” is not located in the generative system itself, nor in a single interpreting subject, but in the interaction between:

  • constraint-based production

  • and later acts of stabilising interpretation

Neither is sufficient alone.

But they are separable.


This is where earlier discussions of recognition must be carefully re-read.

Recognition is not removed.

But it is no longer foundational.

It becomes one mode among others through which coherence is stabilised after generation has already occurred.


From this perspective, “meaning” is not a property that resides in outputs.

Nor is it a property that resides in minds.

It is a relational stabilisation that can occur when generated structure and interpretive constraint align in a sufficiently stable way.


And crucially:

this alignment is not guaranteed.

It is contingent.

It may fail.

It may multiply into incompatible readings.

It may never stabilise into a single account.


Which means that what we call “legibility” is not a property of systems or observers.

It is an event-like stabilisation that occurs under specific configurations of constraint and interpretation.


Once this is admitted, the earlier framework changes subtly but decisively.

Recognition is no longer the condition for legibility.

It is one way legibility is later stabilised.


And selection is not an inferior substitute for recognition.

It is a different generative regime entirely.

One that does not require a standpoint from which coherence must be identified in order to occur.


The implication is not that interpretation becomes unnecessary.

But that it cannot be assumed to be the ground of what is being interpreted.


We are left instead with a more distributed picture:

coherence arises in one domain through constraint-based continuation
and is stabilised in another through acts of recognition and interpretation

The relationship between these domains is not hierarchical.

It is compositional.


And once this is seen, a further question opens:

not how meaning is produced,

but how different regimes of constraint allow different kinds of legibility to emerge at all.