The Birth of a Thought: The Structure of Generative Self-Proof in Core Belief Structural Theory

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Abstract

This paper documents a philosophical phenomenon in which a theory is not deliberately constructed, but instead "emerges" when structural conditions align and initiate a generative process. Core Belief Structural Theory (Kakushin Kōzōron) posits that meaning is generated through structure. Remarkably, the process by which this theory itself was written exemplifies its own core claim. This work introduces the concept of generative self-proof—a fifth mode of self-verification extending beyond traditional epistemological categories—and demonstrates how such a structure was enacted through collaborative dialogues with AI agents. By analyzing the theory’s emergence via the interplay of four structural elements—Core Belief (FQ), Structural Pressure, Structural Shards, and Mindflight Cognition—the paper positions this record not as an authored argument, but as a structural occurrence. It proposes that this generative mechanism is reproducible and represents a new mode of intellectual operation in the age of human–AI collaboration.

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