This white paper develops the concept of life-coherent attention as a new integrative discipline for understanding how distinctions, conversations, technologies, bodies, institutions, and civilizations bring forth worlds that either conserve or negate the conditions of living. It arises from the convergence of several prior streams in the Life-Coherence project: Humberto Maturana’s biology of cognition, languaging, structural coupling, and biology of love; Ken Wilber’s five irreducible paths of transformation; coherence physiology as the embodied substrate of life-coherent medicine; tri-field dynamics of embodied self-regulation; mathematical and resonant models of coherence; and the attention-based architecture of contemporary artificial intelligence.
The paper argues that attention is not merely a cognitive act, computational mechanism, or therapeutic skill. Attention is a world-bringing operation. What an observer distinguishes, attends to, and conserves shapes the domain of possible doings. In artificial intelligence, attention enables large-scale relational patterning across language. In human living, however, attention must be disciplined by love, viability, developmental maturity, evidence, embodiment, shadow awareness, and responsibility for consequences.
The paper proposes that the Life-Coherence project is best understood not as a single totalizing framework, but as an evolving conversational ecology of distinctions ordered toward the preservation, restoration, and expansion of life-capacity. Maturana provides the observer, distinction, languaging, structural coupling, and love-based ethical ground. Wilber provides a five-path safeguard against reducing wholeness to any one domain: Waking Up, Growing Up, Opening Up, Cleaning Up, and Showing Up. Coherence physiology grounds the inquiry in the living organism as a nested continuum of substrate, interface, force-flow, exchange, boundary, energy, and recovery. Mathematical and resonant domains offer formal discipline without final metaphysical authority. Artificial intelligence reveals both the power and danger of attention detached from care.
The central claim is that life-coherent attention must ask, in every domain: What manner of living is being conserved here, and does it conserve or negate the conditions of living? The paper concludes that the work is not to construct a final map of life-coherence, but to conserve a manner of inquiry in which more adequate, humane, embodied, and responsible maps can continue to appear.