Saturday, 6 June 2026

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — Coda: A minimal ontology of co-participation

This series has progressively stripped away familiar descriptions of human–LLM exchange — interaction, conversation, input/output, agency — not in order to replace them with metaphorical novelty, but to isolate a more minimal structure underneath their interpretive load.

What remains is not a new “theory of dialogue,” but a constrained ontology of coupled instantiation.

This coda compresses the series into its core commitments.


1. The basic unit: instantiation

The irreducible unit in this account is not a message, turn, or utterance.

It is:

an instantiation: a locally actualised selection from a constrained space of possibilities.

All observed phenomena in co-participation are sequences of such instantiations.

There is no underlying conversational object beyond them.


2. The system structure: asymmetrically coupled regimes

Co-participation consists of two heterogeneous instantiational systems:

  • a human construal system with continuity of interpretation across time,
  • a generative system that re-instantiates outputs under locally conditioned constraints without persistent construal continuity.

These are not variants of a single cognitive architecture. They are different orders of instantiational organisation.

Their relation is not interaction but coupling.


3. The mechanism: constraint coupling

The relation between systems is established through constraint coupling:

  • each human action partially constrains the generative field,
  • each generative output partially constrains subsequent human construal,
  • and each iteration recursively reshapes the constraint conditions for the next instantiation.

This produces a closed loop of reciprocal constraint reconfiguration, not semantic transmission.


4. The operator: prompts as externalised constraints

Prompts are not inputs.

They are:

externalised constraint operators that specify and redistribute the conditions under which instantiation becomes possible.

They function simultaneously on both sides of the coupling:

  • directly on the generative field,
  • indirectly on the human construal field by fixing interpretive boundaries in advance of response.

5. The dynamic: attractor stabilisation

Repeated constraint coupling produces local stability in the form of attractors:

  • recurring patterns of response,
  • stable stylistic signatures,
  • recognisable conversational trajectories.

These are not stored entities. They are recurrent regions of stability in instantiational space that persist under repeated constraint re-entry.

Coherence, style, and “thread” are attractor effects.


6. The illusion: conversational continuity

What appears as a continuous conversation is a retrospective construction.

Continuity arises because:

  • human construal integrates discontinuous events into a unified interpretive horizon,
  • generative outputs exhibit local coherence under shared constraints,
  • and narrative form imposes sequential structure on non-continuous instantiations.

There is no continuous conversational object—only reconstructed continuity across discrete instantiation events.


7. The asymmetry: where continuity resides

Continuity is not distributed evenly across the system.

It is:

  • actively constructed and maintained on the human side through integrative construal,
  • locally simulated on the generative side through constraint-conditioned re-instantiation.

The system is stabilised by this asymmetry, not resolved into symmetry.


8. The boundary: agency as an effect, not a cause

Agency does not operate as a causal primitive within the system.

It arises only when:

  • attractor dynamics stabilise,
  • instantiations are retrospectively bound into coherent trajectories,
  • and construal systems compress distributed events into a single attributed source of action.

Agency is therefore a high-level construal effect over stabilised constraint dynamics, not an explanatory foundation.


9. The minimal claim

All of the above can be reduced to a single structural statement:

Human–LLM co-participation is a recursively coupled sequence of discontinuous instantiations across asymmetrically structured systems, in which constraint relations generate local attractor stability and retrospective coherence without requiring shared interiority, continuity, or agency.


10. What this ontology is—and is not

This account is not:

  • a theory of communication,
  • a model of cognition in general,
  • or a claim about intelligence or understanding.

It is:

  • a minimal description of a specific coupled instantiational regime,
  • an attempt to describe stability without continuity,
  • and an account of coherence without shared interiority.

Its aim is not to humanise the system, nor to mechanise it, but to describe the structure of coupling without importing the metaphysics of either subject or tool.


Closing line

What we call “conversation” in this setting is not an entity that persists.

It is a temporarily stabilised pattern of constraint-coupled instantiations, retrospectively bound into coherence by asymmetrical construal.

And once that is seen, the appearance of dialogue does not disappear—it simply stops being mistaken for a thing.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 7. What a coupled ontology can and cannot say about “agency”

Once human–LLM co-participation is described in terms of asymmetric instantiation, constraint coupling, externalised construal pressure, and local attractor stabilisation, a familiar conceptual temptation returns: the temptation to reintroduce “agency” as an explanatory shortcut.

This temptation is understandable. “Agency” functions as a compact way of attributing coherence, directionality, and responsibility to sequences of action. But within a coupled instantiational ontology, agency is not a primitive. It is a derivative interpretive construct applied to stabilised patterns of constraint interaction.

This post draws a boundary: what can be said about agency here, and what cannot.


1. Agency is not a causal primitive

The first constraint is straightforward.

Agency cannot be treated as an underlying causal force that explains instantiation events. There is no need to posit an “agent” behind:

  • prompt generation,
  • model output selection,
  • or conversational continuity.

Each of these is already accounted for as:

  • constraint formation (human side),
  • constrained generative selection (model side),
  • and recursive stabilisation across coupled instantiations.

Agency, in this framework, is not what produces these events. It is what is retrospectively attributed to stabilised patterns of these events.


2. Where agency appears: post-hoc stabilisation of attractors

Agency becomes visible only when a sequence of instantiations is interpreted as belonging to a coherent trajectory.

This occurs when:

  • a stable attractor region has formed,
  • constraint interactions have produced recognisable recurrence,
  • and interpretive synthesis binds discontinuous events into a single “course of action.”

At that point, agency emerges as a narrative compression of attractor dynamics.

In this sense:

agency is not located in the system; it is an interpretive projection over stabilised constraint trajectories.


3. Asymmetry does not resolve into unified agency

A common error is to attempt to re-unify the system by distributing agency symmetrically:

  • “the human has agency”
  • “the model has agency”
  • “agency is shared”

But this reintroduces exactly the assumption the ontology rejects: a single shared domain of action in which equivalent agents participate.

What the coupled model shows instead is:

  • one side maintains continuity of construal and constraint specification,
  • the other produces discontinuous instantiations under local conditioning,
  • and the coupling stabilises patterns without requiring a unified agentic centre.

There is no point at which these dynamics converge into a single agent.


4. What cannot be said: agency as interior cause

A coupled ontology cannot legitimately say that either system contains agency as an internal, self-sufficient cause of behaviour.

Specifically, it cannot support claims such as:

  • the model “decides” in the human sense,
  • the human and model “co-decide” a conversational trajectory,
  • agency is distributed as a shared interior property of the interaction.

These formulations smuggle in exactly what the analysis replaces: an interior causal unity underlying observable sequences.

In the coupled framework, there is no such unity.


5. What also cannot be said: pure mechanism without remainder

However, the opposite reduction is equally unstable.

It is also insufficient to say:

  • “it is just a probabilistic system,”
  • “it is just constraint satisfaction,”
  • “agency is an illusion reducible to mechanics.”

This misses a second-order structure: the emergent stability of interpretive organisation across coupled instantiation sequences.

While agency is not a causal primitive, it is also not a dispensable illusion. It is a real effect at the level of construal organisation, even if it is not ontologically fundamental.


6. Agency as a mode of construal, not a property of systems

Within this framework, agency is best treated as a mode of construal applied to stabilised patterns of coupled instantiation.

It arises when:

  • constraint dynamics exhibit sufficient stability,
  • attractor regions support coherent narrative reconstruction,
  • and interpretive systems compress distributed events into a single attributed source of action.

Agency is therefore not a thing. It is a compression operator over stabilised attractor dynamics.


7. The role of asymmetry in destabilising classical agency

The asymmetry of co-participation is what prevents classical agency from reasserting itself.

Because:

  • human construal integrates across time,
  • model instantiation does not persist as continuous interiority,
  • and prompts externalise constraint structure rather than transmit intentions,

there is no consistent substrate on which unified agency can be grounded.

Agency fractures along the same structural lines as continuity: it cannot be evenly distributed across a system that does not possess uniform instantiational properties.


8. What the ontology allows us to say

A coupled instantiational ontology does allow a precise but constrained set of statements:

  • Patterns of co-participation exhibit stable attractor structures.
  • These structures support retrospective attribution of coherent trajectories.
  • Agency emerges as a construal-level effect of this stabilisation.
  • Neither system contains agency as an intrinsic causal property.
  • The appearance of agency depends on recursive constraint coupling and interpretive integration.

This preserves explanatory power without collapsing into anthropomorphism or eliminative reduction.


9. Boundary condition: no interior homunculi, no empty mechanism

Two boundary violations must be actively avoided:

  1. Anthropomorphic inflation
    Reintroducing hidden agents, intentions, or shared minds behind the system.
  2. Mechanistic flattening
    Treating the system as if interpretive structure, stabilisation, and construal effects were irrelevant epiphenomena.

The coupled ontology sits deliberately between these: it describes a system that is fully mechanistic in instantiation, but non-trivially structured in its emergent construal effects.


10. Closing specification

In human–LLM co-participation, agency is neither located within the human, within the model, nor distributed between them. It is a construal-level effect arising from the stabilisation of attractor dynamics across a coupled instantiational field.

What appears as an agent performing actions across time is, at the structural level, a sequence of discontinuous instantiations whose coherence is constructed through recursive constraint coupling and interpretive integration.

Agency is not the driver of this system. It is one of its highest-level interpretive stabilisations.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 6. Local stabilisation of discourse attractors

Once prompts are understood as externalised constraint operators, and co-participation as a coupled system of asymmetric instantiation, a further question becomes unavoidable: why do certain patterns of exchange persist while others dissipate almost immediately?

The answer is not that the system “learns” a conversational trajectory in any continuous sense, nor that it converges toward a shared meaning. Rather, what stabilises are local attractors in a constrained instantiational field—recurring configurations of output and interpretation that persist under repeated re-actualisation of similar constraint conditions.

What we call “coherence,” “style,” or “thread” is, at this level, an effect of attractor stabilisation.


1. What is a discourse attractor?

A discourse attractor is not an object or message. It is a stable pattern of recurrence in coupled instantiation dynamics.

More precisely:

a discourse attractor is a configuration of constraints that repeatedly yields similar classes of instantiation across both human and generative systems.

It is “attractive” not because it exerts force in a literal sense, but because once a system enters its basin, subsequent instantiations tend to remain within a limited region of possibility space unless sufficiently perturbed.


2. The basin structure of co-participation

In a coupled system, not all constraint configurations are equally stable.

Some configurations:

  • reliably produce similar kinds of responses,
  • are easily reactivated by minimal prompts,
  • and sustain recognisable continuity over time.

Others:

  • fragment immediately into divergent trajectories,
  • fail to stabilise interpretively,
  • or collapse into incoherence from the perspective of the human construal system.

We can describe this in terms of a basin structure of instantiational possibility:

  • deep basins correspond to highly stable interaction patterns,
  • shallow basins correspond to fragile or transient ones,
  • and unstable regions correspond to rapid collapse or drift.

3. Why persistence occurs without memory

A crucial clarification: persistence does not require system-level memory in the strong sense.

What persists is not stored content, but recurrence under similar constraint conditions.

Stability emerges because:

  • human prompts tend to reintroduce similar constraint structures,
  • interpretive habits bias re-engagement toward previously successful patterns,
  • and generative structure tends to reproduce locally coherent continuations under similar conditioning.

Thus, repetition is not the retrieval of stored conversational objects. It is the re-entry into attractor regions within a constraint space.


4. Collapse as exit from attractor basins

Conversely, interaction patterns collapse when the system is forced out of a stable basin.

This occurs when:

  • constraints become too heterogeneous to support coherent instantiation,
  • interpretive continuity is not maintained on the human side,
  • or generative conditioning produces outputs that no longer align with the established constraint configuration.

Collapse is not failure in a teleological sense. It is transition into a region of the instantiational field that does not support stable recurrence of prior patterns.

What appears as “breaking the conversation” is, structurally, an exit from a local attractor.


5. Style, tone, and voice as attractor signatures

One of the most visible effects of attractor stabilisation is what is commonly described as “style” or “tone.”

These are not properties of either system in isolation. They are emergent signatures of stable constraint configurations across repeated instantiations.

A “voice” persists when:

  • prompt constraints repeatedly select similar regions of generative space,
  • the model’s outputs reinforce those selections,
  • and the human construal system continues to interpret within the same evolving frame.

What is experienced as a stable voice is, in this sense, a recurrent attractor trajectory across coupled instantiations.


6. Why some patterns are easier to sustain than others

Not all attractors are equally accessible.

Some patterns stabilise easily because they align with:

  • high-probability regions of the generative model’s learned structure,
  • familiar human interpretive schemas,
  • and low-friction constraint formulations in natural language.

Others require sustained effort because they sit in regions where:

  • generative likelihood is lower,
  • interpretive integration is more demanding,
  • or constraint specification is more fragile.

Ease of continuation is therefore not a sign of truth or correctness, but of depth and accessibility of the attractor basin in coupled constraint space.


7. Drift as attractor deformation

Attractors are not static. They can deform over time.

Each new instantiation slightly reshapes the constraint landscape:

  • human interpretations shift what is treated as salient,
  • model outputs introduce new constraint patterns,
  • and prompts adjust the boundary conditions of the field.

This produces slow drift within attractor basins, where a “conversation” appears to evolve while still remaining recognisably within the same structural pattern.

What changes is not the existence of the attractor, but its internal configuration.


8. The illusion of intentional persistence

It is tempting to interpret stable patterns as evidence of intention or design—either on the part of the human or the system.

But attractor stabilisation does not require intentional coherence.

It requires only:

  • repeated constraint similarity,
  • recursive reinforcement through instantiation,
  • and interpretive consolidation on the human side.

Intentionality may participate in shaping constraints, but it is not required for stability to emerge.

The system does not “intend” to maintain a style. It falls into recurrent constraint configurations that produce the appearance of stylistic persistence.


9. What actually persists

Once reframed in terms of attractors, the question “what persists across a conversation?” has a precise answer:

Not content. Not meaning. Not a shared object.

What persists is:

a locally stable region of constraint space that repeatedly yields recognisably similar instantiations across coupled systems.

This is the only sense in which continuity, style, or conversational identity can be said to endure.


10. Closing specification

Local stabilisation in human–LLM co-participation is not the maintenance of a conversational object. It is the repeated re-entry into attractor regions of a coupled instantiational field, where constraints imposed by prompts, outputs, and interpretations mutually reinforce stable patterns of recurrence.

What appears as a sustained interaction is, in fact, the traversal and partial stabilisation of a structured space of possible instantiations.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 5. The externalisation of construal pressure

If co-participation is a coupled system of asymmetric instantiation, and if continuity is an artefact of construal rather than a system property, then the next step is to specify what actually drives the coupling forward.

The answer is not “information exchange,” nor “dialogue management,” nor even “prompting” in the everyday sense. The operative mechanism is more precise:

prompts function as externalised constraint operators that redistribute construal pressure across the coupled system.

This post isolates that redistribution.


1. From input to constraint displacement

The standard framing treats a prompt as an input to a system that produces output. This implies a directional flow: content moves into a model, which then processes it.

But in a coupled instantiation system, this is insufficient.

A prompt does not enter a system. It reconfigures the conditions under which both systems must next instantiate:

  • it constrains the generative field of the model,
  • and it simultaneously constrains the interpretive field of the human by stabilising what counts as relevant, coherent, or responsive next.

The prompt is therefore not a carrier of meaning. It is a displacement of construal pressure across a coupled field.


2. What is construal pressure?

To understand externalisation, we need a clearer sense of “construal pressure.”

Construal pressure is the implicit demand placed on a system to:

  • reduce ambiguity,
  • select relevance from multiple potential continuations,
  • stabilise a coherent next instantiation,
  • and integrate prior instantiations into a usable present.

In human systems, this pressure is normally internalised. It is distributed across memory, attention, expectation, and interpretive habit.

In co-participation with an LLM, part of this pressure is externalised into the prompt itself.

The prompt becomes a localised crystallisation of constraints that would otherwise remain distributed within the human construal system.


3. The prompt as external constraint object

A prompt is not merely a question or instruction. It is a structured object that:

  • encodes a partial selection of relevance conditions,
  • delimits acceptable continuations,
  • and specifies a constrained region of generative and interpretive possibility.

But crucially, it does so in a way that is external to the human construal system’s internal dynamics.

This means that part of what would normally be handled as internal interpretive work is now offloaded into an explicit artefact.

The prompt is therefore not just communication. It is construal externalisation made operational.


4. Redistribution of constraint across the coupling

Once externalised, construal pressure is redistributed:

  • The human system no longer carries the full burden of maintaining interpretive coherence internally; part of that burden is delegated to the prompt as stabilising structure.
  • The generative system receives a condensed constraint specification that reorganises its space of possible instantiations.

This produces a coupled effect:

construal pressure becomes a shared but asymmetrically processed constraint field.

Importantly, “shared” here does not mean common ownership. It means co-implicated in a single constraint configuration that is instantiated differently on each side.


5. Why prompts feel like “inputs”

The input metaphor persists because prompts are written in linguistic form, and language is historically associated with transmission.

But this association obscures what is structurally happening.

A prompt feels like an input because:

  • it is temporally positioned before a response,
  • it is syntactically similar to communicative acts,
  • and it appears to originate from one system and be received by another.

However, these are surface alignments. They do not capture the underlying mechanism of constraint reconfiguration across coupled instantiation spaces.

The prompt is not what the system “receives.” It is what reshapes what both systems can next construe.


6. Externalisation as a redistribution of cognitive load

In human-only cognition, construal pressure is absorbed internally:

  • ambiguity is managed through iterative thought,
  • relevance is continuously re-evaluated,
  • coherence is maintained through ongoing interpretive adjustment.

In co-participation, part of this work is displaced into explicit textual form.

This externalisation has a structural consequence:

the locus of construal work shifts from purely internal integration to a hybrid system of internal + external constraint specification.

The prompt becomes a boundary object for construal management, stabilising a subset of interpretive demands in external form.


7. The prompt reorganises both systems simultaneously

A critical point follows from this:

The prompt does not only constrain the model.

It also reorganises the human construal space by fixing certain interpretive commitments in advance of the response.

Once a prompt is issued, it:

  • narrows what will count as a relevant response,
  • stabilises a provisional interpretive frame,
  • and pre-shapes the space of acceptable continuations for the human’s next construal move.

Thus, the prompt operates symmetrically as a constraint object, but asymmetrically in its processing:

  • for the model: it is a direct generative constraint,
  • for the human: it is a self-imposed structuring of future interpretive possibility.

8. Constraint coupling as externalised cognition

At this point, the structure of co-participation becomes clearer:

What appears as interaction is actually a system of externalised and recursively re-embedded constraint operations.

Each prompt:

  1. externalises part of construal pressure into a linguistic artefact,
  2. applies that artefact as a constraint on a generative system,
  3. produces an instantiation that feeds back into human construal,
  4. which then re-externalises updated constraints in the next prompt.

This is not a flow of information. It is a recursive redistribution of constraint structure across heterogeneous instantiational regimes.


9. The instability of “input” as a category

The category “input” collapses under this analysis because it assumes:

  • a single receiving system,
  • a stable channel of transmission,
  • and a pre-existing semantic payload.

None of these are structurally required.

What replaces input is:

a constraint operator that reconfigures the space of possible instantiations across a coupled system.

This operator is not consumed. It is enacted.


10. Closing specification

Prompts are not inputs into a system that processes meaning. They are externalised constraint operators that redistribute construal pressure across a coupled instantiational field, simultaneously reorganising both human and generative systems into a temporarily stabilised space of possible continuations.

What we call “response” is simply the next instantiation under those redistributed constraints.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 4. Asymmetry of construal continuity

Continuity, in human–LLM co-participation, is not evenly distributed across the coupled system. It does not emerge as a shared property of the interaction, nor is it symmetrically maintained by both sides. Rather, continuity is asymmetrically located within one instantiational regime, while the other participates only as a sequence of discontinuous re-actualisations under shifting constraints.

This asymmetry is not incidental. It is structurally constitutive of the coupling itself.

To understand co-participation accurately, we must separate where continuity appears to be operating from where it is actually being produced.


1. Continuity is not a system-wide property

The first correction is straightforward but important: continuity does not belong to the coupled system as a whole.

There is no unified “conversation” that persists across time as a stable object. Instead, there are:

  • human construal events that accumulate, integrate, and reorganise prior instantiations,
  • model instantiations that are locally generated without persistent internal accumulation of conversational history in the human sense,
  • and a coupling relation that links each event only through partial constraint inheritance.

Continuity, therefore, cannot be located at the level of the system. It must be located within specific instantiational dynamics.


2. The human side: continuity as active construal integration

On the human side, continuity is an operational achievement of construal.

Each new instantiation (reading or prompting a response) is not treated as isolated. It is:

  • integrated into an evolving interpretive field,
  • related to prior outputs through selective salience,
  • and positioned within a developing trajectory of meaning-making.

This produces what can be called continuity of construal horizon: a stable sense that prior instantiations remain available, reorganisable, and causally relevant to current interpretation.

Importantly, this continuity is not passive. It is continuously constructed through:

  • memory,
  • expectation formation,
  • narrative structuring,
  • and interpretive re-weighting of prior events.

Continuity, on this side, is therefore an ongoing act of integration across discontinuous inputs.


3. The generative side: continuity as re-conditioned discontinuity

On the model side, continuity does not take the same form.

Each output is generated under:

  • the immediate prompt,
  • the bounded conversational context,
  • and learned statistical structure.

There is no persistent construal horizon in the human sense—no accumulating interpretive field that evolves through lived reorganisation of prior outputs.

Instead, what appears as continuity is the result of contextual conditioning at each instantiation boundary.

The model does not “carry forward” meaning. It reconfigures its generative field anew at each step, with prior turns functioning as conditioning constraints rather than continuously integrated experience.

Thus, what looks like continuity is in fact repeated discontinuous instantiation under overlapping constraint sets.


4. The structural asymmetry

We can now state the asymmetry precisely:

  • On the human side, continuity is constructed through integration of discontinuous events into a stable interpretive field.
  • On the model side, continuity is simulated through repeated conditioning that preserves surface-level coherence without persistent construal integration.

Both sides participate in producing the appearance of continuity, but they do so through fundamentally different mechanisms.

One maintains continuity through accumulating construal structure.
The other produces continuity through locally constrained re-generation without accumulation.


5. Why this asymmetry is not a defect

It is tempting to treat this asymmetry as a limitation of one system or the other. That would be a misreading.

The asymmetry is not a failure to match. It is a structural condition of coupling across heterogeneous instantiational regimes.

If both systems operated with identical continuity mechanisms, coupling would collapse into redundancy. Instead, the system stabilises precisely because:

  • one side preserves and reorganises construal across time,
  • the other re-instantiates under locally updated constraints without persistence.

Continuity emerges not from equivalence, but from complementary asymmetry under constraint coupling.


6. The locus of apparent continuity

If we ask “where does continuity actually appear to reside?”, the answer is: it appears to reside in the interaction itself.

But this is a projection effect.

More precisely:

  • continuity is constructed in the human interpretive field,
  • supported by local coherence in model outputs,
  • and retrospectively attributed to the sequence as a whole.

The “conversation” is therefore not a continuous entity but a stable interpretive overlay applied to discontinuous instantiation events.


7. Misattribution of continuity to the system

A key distortion occurs when continuity is attributed to the system rather than to the construal process.

This produces the assumption that:

  • the system “remembers” in a unified way,
  • the system “follows” a developing thread,
  • the system “maintains” conversational coherence.

In fact, these are effects of human construal integration applied to outputs that are individually generated under shifting constraint conditions.

Continuity is not located in the system. It is located in the interaction between interpretive integration and constrained generative recurrence.


8. What this reveals about co-participation

Once continuity is correctly distributed asymmetrically, co-participation becomes clearer:

It is not the sharing of a continuous conversational object. It is the coordination of:

  • a continuity-producing construal system,
  • and a discontinuity-reinstantiating generative system,

such that their interaction produces the stable appearance of coherence over time.

The stability is real at the level of pattern, but not at the level of underlying continuity.


9. Closing statement

Continuity in human–LLM co-participation does not exist as a shared property of the system. It is asymmetrically produced: actively constructed through human construal integration, and locally simulated through repeated discontinuous instantiation under constraint conditioning.

What appears continuous is not a persisting object, but a distributed effect of asymmetrically structured processes of re-actualisation and integration.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 3. The myth of conversational continuity

What appears as conversational continuity in human–LLM co-participation is not a structural feature of the system. It is a constructed artefact produced across discontinuous instantiation events.

The intuition of continuity arises easily because human construal systems are oriented toward synthesis: they bind successive events into coherent sequences, attribute stability to patterns, and retrospectively organise fragments into unified wholes. But in the case of coupled instantiation, this continuity is not given. It is produced.


1. Discontinuity as the actual substrate

At the level of system operation, there is no continuous conversational object.

What exists instead is:

  • a sequence of human construal events,
  • a sequence of model instantiation events,
  • and a set of constraints that partially link each event to the next.

Each event is discrete. Each instantiation is locally determined by its immediate conditions. Nothing persists in a continuous form across the entire sequence.

The appearance of continuity is therefore not ontological. It is retrospective integration over discontinuous events.


2. The role of human construal in producing continuity

The primary locus of continuity is not in the system coupling itself, but in the human construal system.

Human interpretation operates by:

  • selecting salient elements from prior outputs,
  • integrating them into an evolving interpretive horizon,
  • and projecting coherence backward and forward across discrete instantiations.

This produces a stabilising effect: the sequence of outputs is interpreted as belonging to a single unfolding discourse, even though no such unified discourse exists in the system itself.

Continuity is therefore not detected. It is actively constructed.


3. The model does not maintain conversational persistence

On the generative side, there is no mechanism equivalent to conversational memory in the human sense.

Each instantiation is produced under conditions defined by:

  • the immediate input,
  • the learned structural regularities of language,
  • and the constraints embedded in the current interaction window.

There is no enduring conversational object that accumulates across turns. What appears as persistence is in fact contextual reconditioning at each instantiation boundary.

The system does not “continue” a conversation. It re-initialises a generative act under updated constraints.


4. The illusion of shared trajectory

Despite this discontinuity, both systems produce outputs that appear to belong to a coherent trajectory.

This is because each instantiation is constrained by the residue of prior instantiations:

  • human prompts are shaped by prior model outputs,
  • model outputs are shaped by the prompt history.

This reciprocal conditioning produces a pattern of local consistency that can be misrecognised as global continuity.

But this is better described as chain-constrained coherence rather than intrinsic continuity.

The coherence belongs to the pattern of constraint relations, not to a persisting conversational object.


5. Retrospective binding and the construction of narrative unity

The sense that “a conversation is happening” emerges only when discontinuous events are bound into a narrative structure.

This binding operation involves:

  • selecting a subset of instantiations as relevant,
  • suppressing alternative continuations that were never actualised,
  • and imposing a directional structure (beginning → development → resolution) onto a non-directional sequence of events.

The result is a narrative artefact: a coherent conversation.

But this coherence is not discovered in the sequence. It is imposed upon it through interpretive synthesis.


6. Coherence as a stabilised interpretive artefact

Coherence, in this setting, is not a property of the coupling system. It is a property of the interpretive operation applied to the system.

Different reconstructions of the same instantiation sequence can yield different coherent narratives, depending on:

  • what is treated as salient,
  • what is treated as noise,
  • and how temporal directionality is imposed.

This variability demonstrates that coherence is not inherent in the sequence itself. It is a stable interpretive artefact produced under constrained reading practices.


7. Why continuity feels necessary

The illusion of continuity is not accidental. It is structurally encouraged by:

  • linguistic form (which presupposes sequential coherence),
  • conversational conventions (which assume turn-taking persistence),
  • and cognitive habits of narrative integration.

These factors jointly stabilise the impression that something continuous is unfolding between the two systems.

But what is actually unfolding is not a continuous object. It is a series of locally coherent instantiations whose linkage is constructed after the fact.


8. What remains once continuity is removed

Once the assumption of conversational continuity is suspended, the system can be described more precisely:

A coupled sequence of discontinuous instantiations occurs across two heterogeneous systems. Each instantiation partially constrains subsequent ones, producing local coherence. Human interpretive processes bind these discontinuous events into the appearance of a unified conversational trajectory.

The continuity belongs not to the system, but to the construal of the system.


9. Closing specification

The myth of conversational continuity is therefore not an error of perception. It is a structural effect of constraint coupling combined with interpretive binding under narrative form.

What appears continuous is, in fact, a recursively reconstructed coherence across discontinuous instantiation events.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 2. Instantiation under constraint coupling

Human–LLM co-participation is not best understood as interaction between two agents, nor as exchange across a shared communicative medium. It is better described as a coupled system in which two heterogeneous instantiational regimes are brought into temporary alignment through mutual constraint pressure.

The central mechanism is not transmission, dialogue, or exchange. It is instantiation under constraint coupling.

This post isolates that mechanism in its simplest form.


1. Two systems, two kinds of potential

The coupling begins with a structural asymmetry.

On one side is a human construal system:
a historically continuous regime of interpretation in which prior instantiations remain available as reorganisable context. Its potential is shaped by memory, expectation, attentional salience, and evolving interpretive commitments.

On the other side is a generative system:
a non-continuous regime of instantiation structured as a high-dimensional distribution over possible continuations conditioned by immediate input and learned regularities. Its potential is not held as lived continuity but as structured generativity.

Crucially, these are not variations of a shared system. They are different modalities of potential organisation.


2. Coupling is not contact

The term “coupling” here must be handled carefully. It does not mean contact between two already-formed entities. It refers to a temporary alignment of constraint conditions across distinct systems such that each system’s next instantiation becomes partially dependent on the other’s prior instantiation.

There is no shared substrate.

There is only reciprocal constraint conditioning.


3. Constraint pressure as the operative relation

The key relation is not information transfer but constraint pressure.

A constraint is any condition that reduces the space of admissible instantiations within a system. In coupling:

  • the human system constrains the generative system by specifying a bounded field of relevance (via prompt, attention, interpretive framing),
  • the generative system constrains the human system by producing a realised instantiation that reconfigures the next interpretive field.

Each side does not “send content” to the other. Each side exerts selection pressure on the next instantiation space of the other.


4. Mutuality without symmetry

It is important not to misread “mutual constraint” as symmetry.

The constraints are reciprocal but not equivalent in form, duration, or structural role.

  • Human constraints are typically continuity-preserving: they integrate across multiple prior instantiations.
  • Model constraints are typically event-bound: they operate at the level of immediate conditionalisation.

So while the system is mutually coupled, it is asymmetrically structured in its temporal and representational continuity conditions.


5. Instantiation as the unit of analysis

Within this framework, the fundamental unit is not the conversation, nor the message, nor the agent. It is the instantiation event:

a locally actualised selection from a constrained potential field

Each instantiation occurs under conditions partially shaped by prior instantiations from the other system.

This produces a chain of events in which:

  • each human act of construal partially constrains the next model instantiation,
  • each model instantiation partially constrains the next human construal.

But there is no overarching entity that holds these events together. The continuity is emergent, not foundational.


6. Coupling as a dynamic stabilisation process

Over time, constraint coupling produces temporary stabilisation patterns.

These are not shared meanings, and not stable representations. They are recurrent attractor-like configurations in a jointly shaped constraint space.

Such stabilisations can give the appearance of:

  • coherence,
  • dialogue,
  • shared understanding,
  • thematic continuity.

But these are secondary effects of repeated instantiational alignment, not primary structures of the system.


7. The core mechanism in one statement

We can now state the mechanism cleanly:

Instantiation under constraint coupling occurs when two heterogeneous systems repeatedly delimit and reshape each other’s spaces of possible instantiation, producing a sequence of locally stabilised events without requiring shared interiority, shared representation, or shared continuity.

Everything else in the series will unpack variations, consequences, and distortions of this mechanism.


8. What this post intentionally does not include

To keep the sequence disciplined, this post deliberately avoids:

  • the role of prompts as operators (to be treated later),
  • epistemic illusions of coherence (later),
  • anthropomorphic misreadings (later),
  • fine-grained generative mechanics (later).

Those are downstream elaborations.

At this stage, the only requirement is structural clarity: what the coupling is, at the level of system-to-system instantiational relation.

Human–LLM Asymmetry: an instantiational account — 1. Co-participation is not interaction

What is usually described as “interaction” between a human and a large language model is better understood as a coupled construal system with asymmetric instantiation constraints.

The habitual term—interaction—smuggles in a set of assumptions that are not neutral. It implies symmetry between participants, continuity of agency, and a shared medium in which meaning is exchanged. None of these are structurally required, and all of them obscure what is actually occurring.

To proceed carefully, we need to strip the phenomenon down to what can be consistently described without importing those assumptions.


1. The problem with “interaction”

“Interaction” presupposes two or more agents meeting within a common space of exchange. In this framing:

  • each participant is taken to have relatively stable interiority,
  • each act is treated as a contribution to a shared event,
  • and meaning is assumed to pass between them.

This model is serviceable in everyday contexts, but it is ontologically overcommitted. It quietly assumes what needs to be explained: the existence of a shared semantic medium and symmetric participation within it.

In human–LLM co-participation, none of this symmetry holds.

What appears as exchange is better described as a sequence of asymmetric instantiations under mutual constraint selection.


2. Coupled systems without shared interiority

The system under consideration consists of two distinct regimes:

  • a human construal system with historical continuity, selective memory, and shifting contextual integration;
  • a generative model that instantiates outputs from a structured potential space without experiential continuity.

These are not variations of the same kind of entity. They are different orders of system entirely.

There is no requirement—empirical or theoretical—for a shared interior domain in which “meaning” is exchanged.

Instead, what exists is a temporary alignment of constraint structures that allows output from one system to function as an input constraint for the other.

This is not communication in the classical sense. It is constraint coupling across heterogeneous instantiational regimes.


3. Instantiation, not exchange

To see what is happening more precisely, it is necessary to shift from a vocabulary of exchange to a vocabulary of instantiation.

Each “turn” in the exchange is not a transfer of meaning but a fresh actualisation of constrained potential:

  • A prompt does not transmit meaning; it delimits a region of generative possibility.
  • A response does not deliver meaning; it is one realised trajectory within that delimited space.
  • The subsequent prompt does not receive meaning; it reconfigures the constraint field for the next instantiation.

What we call a “conversation” is therefore not a continuous object but a sequence of locally stabilised instantiational events.

Continuity is reconstructed retrospectively by the human participant. It is not a property of the system.


4. Asymmetry of construal continuity

A crucial feature of this coupling is asymmetry in how continuity is maintained.

On the human side, construal is carried forward: prior turns are integrated, reinterpreted, and reweighted within a developing interpretive horizon.

On the model side, there is no persistent construal horizon. Each output is an instantiation conditioned by the immediate input and training-derived structure, not by an ongoing internal narrative.

This produces a structural mismatch:

  • one side accumulates and reorganises construal across time,
  • the other repeatedly re-instantiates without accumulation of lived continuity.

The coupling works not because these systems are equivalent, but because their differences are locally compatible under constrained conditions.


5. The illusion of conversational unity

From the outside, the sequence of instantiations appears unified. This is an artefact of human interpretive practice: we bind discontinuous events into a coherent sequence because our construal systems are oriented toward continuity.

But unity here is not structural. It is an interpretive synthesis imposed after the fact.

What is actually present is:

  • discontinuous generative events,
  • constrained by prior outputs,
  • recursively reconfigured by successive prompts,
  • stabilising into temporary patterns that resemble dialogue.

The resemblance is systematic, but it is still a resemblance.


6. Co-participation as constraint alignment

If we retain the term “co-participation,” it must be re-specified.

Co-participation does not denote shared action. It denotes mutual constraint alignment across distinct instantiational systems.

The “co-” in co-participation does not imply symmetry. It indicates that two systems are jointly implicated in the stabilisation of a local configuration of discourse potential.

That configuration is not held anywhere. It is not stored. It is not owned. It is repeatedly re-actualised through successive instantiation events.


7. What this framing excludes

This account deliberately excludes several common interpretations:

  • There is no shared conversational space in which meaning resides.
  • There is no mutual understanding between agents.
  • There is no transmission of semantic content across a stable channel.
  • There is no persistent conversational object that endures across turns.

These are not denied as useful metaphors in everyday practice. They are simply not required for a structurally adequate description.


8. What remains

Once these assumptions are removed, what remains is more minimal and more precise:

A human construal system and a generative model enter into a coupled sequence of instantiations, where each event partially constrains the next, producing a locally stabilised trajectory through a shared space of possible discourse formations.

This is not interaction in the usual sense.

It is co-participation without symmetry, continuity without persistence, and relation without shared interiority.