# The Loop
The primitive unit of selfhood is the self-sustaining causal loop.
One clarification has to come first. The loop is physically realized, but it
does not need the idea of a body in order to persist. What the loop later
recognizes as "the body" is already an imprint: an internally organized image
by which it tracks boundary, reach, vulnerability, and continuity. So the
primitive unit is not the body as experienced, not the organ, and not the image
in the mirror. It is the recurrent loop that may later come to carry such an
image.
Let a system have an internal state \(x_t\) and receive an environmental input
\(u_t\). Write its update in the abstract form
$$
x_{t+1} = F(x_t, u_t).
$$
This is still only a driven system. A causal loop appears when the present
state helps determine the conditions of its own future persistence. In the
minimal sense, the system does not merely undergo change; it contributes to the
production of the next state from which it will continue.
That is the point of closure. A loop does not need to be isolated from the
world. It needs only to preserve a recurrent organization despite exchange with
the world. A flame remains a flame while fuel enters and heat leaves. A cell
remains a cell while ions, molecules, and signals cross its boundary. A person
remains a person while matter, memory, and attention continuously change. The
identity lies in the organization that closes over itself, not in the material
that happens to occupy it at a given moment.
This already distinguishes a loop from a mere chain. A chain can transmit
effects and end. A loop must return influence into itself. Without that return,
there is no persistence of organization, and without persistence there is no
self to speak of. None of this yet requires an imprint of body, self, time, or
world. Those may arise later, but they are not the primitive condition of the
loop.
The simplest useful distinction is between external forcing and internal
steering. External forcing is whatever reaches the loop from outside. Internal
steering is the dependence of future behavior on the loop's own retained
organization. If every next state were fixed entirely by the latest input, the
system would have no depth. It would be an immediate transducer. A loop becomes
more self-like as more of its next state depends on its own persisting
structure.
At this primitive stage, it is acceptable to say that the self is the loop. But
that sentence must be handled carefully. Later chapters will distinguish the
loop itself from the imprints through which it experiences body and world. The
body is not the primitive condition of the loop. It is a later self-identifying
image the loop may form and consult. The self is not identical to that
body-imprint. It is the recurrent organization that can survive, learn, and
steer whether or not such an image has yet become explicit.
This matters because the loop can outstrip any particular local signal. Once a
system closes over itself, incoming events no longer determine it one by one.
They enter a pre-existing organization that selects, amplifies, suppresses, and
reinterprets them. The same stimulus can therefore produce different outcomes in
different loops, or in the same loop at different stages of its persistence.
That is already enough to reject a shallow picture of life as mere reaction.
What matters is not whether a system moves when pushed. Everything moves when
pushed. What matters is whether the system carries forward its own constraints
and uses them to shape what the push will become.
The next step is therefore not primitive but developmental. A loop may persist
with no explicit imprint at all. But once it begins to preserve traces, biases,
remembered paths, or other stable internal differences that alter what comes
next, it has entered a deeper regime. Those internally retained differences are
what I will call imprints.
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