Self-as-an-End
SAE Psychoanalysis Series · Paper I

SAE Psychoanalysis (I): Id — The Me Without a Self
SAE精神分析(一):Id——没有自我的我

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19321143  ·  CC BY 4.0
Han Qin · 2026
EN
中文

Writing Declaration: This paper was co-drafted with Claude (Anthropic). All intellectual decisions, framework design, and final editorial judgments were made by the author.

This is the first of four papers in the SAE Psychoanalysis series. The series inherits four clinical invariants from Freudian psychoanalysis — repression, transference, resistance, and symptom — while replacing its metapsychology (drive economics, topographical models, the Oedipus complex as universal explanation) through constructive replacement grounded in the Self-as-an-End (SAE) dimensional framework (12DD–15DD).

This paper redefines the Id. Freud (1923) defined the Id as the great reservoir of libido, governed by the pleasure principle. SAE extracts the structural kernel of Freud's Id — psychic operation that is not observed by a self — and anchors it to 12DD (the law of prediction): a mode in which cognition, causal inference, and predictive response are fully operative, but self-awareness is absent. This is a minimal strict correspondence, not a literal preservation of Freud's original meaning; the drive-theoretical and pleasure-principle components are explicitly placed in the lower-bound remainder.

The series' first theorem is: the object determines the layer, not the developmental stage. Id is not something one grows out of. It is an operational mode that any adult may inhabit when facing certain relational objects — not regression to an earlier stage, but the fact that self was never stably acquired in the presence of that particular object.

The paper rewrites repression as inter-layer masking (a high-layer narrative covering the actual low-layer operation), transference as layer visibility (fixed layer-object patterns becoming visible in the analytic relationship), and resistance as layer self-protection (the threat of discovering one's actual layer position). It proposes a neural-science interface based on state-switching rather than localization, identifies candidate neural windows for the Id layer (implicit learning, automaticity, blindsight), and offers three nontrivial predictions that empirically distinguish the SAE framework from the Freudian one.

Keywords: Self-as-an-End, SAE, psychoanalysis, Id, me-without-self, 12DD, chisel-construct cycle, object-activation, state-switching

1. What This Series Inherits, Replaces, and Does Not Deny

1.1 Inherited: Four Clinical Invariants

Freud identified four phenomena that have been confirmed across psychoanalytic schools for over a century. They are not theory-free raw facts — every observation carries some theoretical load — but their cross-school persistence is robust enough to treat them as clinical invariants:

Repression (Verdrängung). An active, ongoing process of exclusion operates in mental life. Certain contents are dynamically kept out of awareness — not forgotten, but sustained through continuous expenditure.

Transference (Übertragung). In the analytic relationship, the patient brings relational patterns from earlier life into the interaction with the analyst. This is not metaphorical but observable and recurrent.

Resistance (Widerstand). When analysis approaches certain material, the patient produces various forms of opposition — lateness, silence, topic changes, hostility toward the analyst. Resistance is not weakness of will; it is structural self-protection.

Symptom (Symptom). Neurotic symptoms are not random malfunctions but meaningful compromise formations — simultaneously expressing the excluded content and the force that excludes it.

This series accepts all four.

1.2 Replaced: Freud's Metapsychology

What this series replaces is not the clinical observations but their explanatory framework:

Drive economics. Freud conceived mental life as flows of psychic energy — libido invested, transferred, discharged. This model is a nineteenth-century thermodynamic metaphor, not a structural description.

Topographical models. Freud proposed first a topographical model (conscious / preconscious / unconscious), then a structural model (Id / Ego / Superego), with unresolved tension between them. He himself acknowledged in 1923 that "the property of being unconscious begins to lose significance," since much of the Ego is also unconscious. But he did not take the next step — he continued to understand psychic structure through spatial metaphor.

The Oedipus complex as universal explanation. Freud anchored Superego formation in the resolution of the Oedipus complex and made guilt its core output. This has partial clinical correspondence in Western nuclear-family structures but cannot be aligned with East Asian family configurations. The Japanese Ajase complex and the Chinese filial-piety complex are cultural corrections to the Oedipal framework. This series does not require the Oedipus complex.

1.3 Not Denied: Libido

This series does not deny the existence of libido or sexual drive. Bodily, pre-linguistic drive experience is part of mental life. But in the SAE dimensional sequence, libido belongs to the remainder below 12DD — it operates at the life-round level (5DD–8DD), beneath the cognition round where this series begins. The chisel of this series starts at 12DD and does not process what lies below.

This is not avoidance but a methodological boundary declaration. A theory that knows where its chisel reaches is more reliable than one that claims to chisel everything. Freud's problem was precisely that he pushed drive theory downward into biology (the death instinct) and upward into cultural theory (Civilization and Its Discontents), without cleanly finishing either.

If someone wishes to build the bridge from libido upward to the Id layer — describing in SAE language how drive, trauma, and somatic memory shape 12DD-level operation — that is a valuable independent research direction. This series leaves the interface open but does not complete it.

2. Id Redefined

2.1 Freud's Id

Freud formally introduced the Id (das Es) in The Ego and the Id (1923). Three core elements define it: the Id is "the great reservoir of libido"; it is governed by the pleasure principle; it is unconscious.

Freud also offered a celebrated metaphor: the Ego's relation to the Id is "like a man on horseback, who has to hold in check the superior strength of the horse."

The problem with this definition is that it simultaneously serves as a structural description ("operation not observed by consciousness") and a substantive content-description ("reservoir of libido"). The former is a valuable structural insight; the latter is a nineteenth-century energy metaphor. Freud himself sensed this tension — in the same work he wrote that the Ego is "that part of the Id which has been modified by the direct influence of the external world," implying that the boundary between Id and Ego is not a wall between two entities but two states of the same operating process. He did not follow this direction.

2.2 SAE's Id: Me-Without-Self

In the SAE dimensional sequence, 12DD is the fourth step of the cognition round — the law of prediction:

  • Bridge: the retrospectiveness of memory (remainder of 11DD)
  • Chisel product: inference (using past patterns to infer the future; direction solidifies)
  • Construct: law of prediction
  • Corresponding emergence: biological-level causal reasoning (crows using tools, chimpanzee deception)
  • Remainder: prediction cannot predict the predictor itself (Gödel / Turing)

The key feature of 12DD: cognition is present, self-awareness is not. The organism at 12DD can perceive, remember, infer, and execute complex causal reasoning — but it does not know "it is I who am doing these things." The predictor does not know it is a predictor.

This is SAE's redefinition of Id: Id is me-without-self — there is a "me" operating, but this "me" is not seen by itself.

2.3 Minimal Strict Correspondence

SAE extracts the structural kernel of Freud's Id — operation not seen by a self — and anchors it to 12DD. The drive-theoretical components of Freud's Id (libido, pleasure principle, instinctual reservoir) are explicitly placed in the lower-bound remainder. This is constructive replacement, not literal preservation. The reader should not equate SAE's Id with Freud's Id, but understand it as the product of extracting a structural kernel and re-anchoring it within the SAE dimensional sequence.

2.4 Rereading "Wo Es war, soll Ich werden"

Freud wrote in the New Introductory Lectures (1933) what may be the most cited sentence in psychoanalytic history: "Wo Es war, soll Ich werden" — "Where Id was, there Ego shall be."

This is usually read as: the goal of treatment is to let the light of consciousness illuminate the dark corners of the unconscious, letting rational Ego take over instinctual Id.

Under the SAE four-layer framework, the sentence acquires a more precise meaning: where me-without-self operates, self shall appear. Not reason taking over instinct, but self-awareness illuminating those operational modes that lack self-awareness. What is seen is not "repressed instinctual wishes" but "the layer at which you actually operate in the presence of a given object."

3. The Object-Activation Principle: The Series' First Theorem

3.1 First Theorem: The Object Determines the Layer, Not the Stage

The first theorem of this series is: the object determines the layer, not the developmental stage. For mature subjects, Id / Ego / Superego / Cert exist as potential operational modes simultaneously; which mode is activated depends on which relational object is being faced. Once this theorem is established, the subsequent rewrites of repression, transference, resistance, anxiety, symptom, and dream across the four papers are not six separate ideas but six projections of a single structural principle.

3.2 Id Is Not a Developmental Stage

Freud's developmental theory places the Id at the earliest position: the infant is entirely Id, then Ego differentiates from Id, then Superego forms during the Oedipal period. This is a linear developmental narrative — from primitive to mature.

SAE's proposition is different: every adult simultaneously possesses the Id operational mode. Id is not something you outgrow; it is how you operate when facing certain objects. An adult who performs excellently at work may operate entirely at Id level when facing his mother — responding instantly and automatically to her tone, expression, and micro-emotional shifts, without knowing "it is I who am reacting this way." He has not "regressed to childhood" — he never stably acquired self in her presence.

3.3 Object Determines Layer: Development Still Matters, Differently

Freud's "regression" concept presupposes a developmental timeline: you have reached the Ego stage, but under pressure you fall back to the Id stage. SAE does not need this presupposition.

When you face different objects, you operate at different layers — this is not regression but the structure of layer-object relations. You may be Id with your boss (pure reaction, unaware of what you are doing), Ego with a friend (self present but directionless), Superego with your work (purposeful).

Object determines layer does not mean history no longer matters. Developmental history determines which object-classes are most likely to activate which layer — the fact that you tend to fall into Id mode before authority figures probably relates to your early caregiving relationships. But SAE uses history differently from Freud: history shapes your object-class list and the default layer for each class, rather than determining which "global developmental stage" you occupy. History is the shaper of the layer-object map, not the determinant of a global layer position.

3.4 What Kinds of Objects Activate the Id Layer

What objects tend to activate Id-level operation? Given 12DD's structural features — cognition and prediction present, self-awareness absent — the following object-types are likely activators:

Early relational objects. Parents, primary caregivers — these relationships formed interaction patterns before your self appeared. These patterns crystallized at the 12DD layer as predictive response circuits that were never examined by self.

Authority objects. Your responses to authority — compliance, people-pleasing, fear, defiance — are often 12DD-level patterned reactions. You can use self to analyze these responses afterward, but in the moment you are on autopilot.

Objects that trigger intense emotion. Anger, fear, sexual attraction — when emotional intensity exceeds a certain threshold, self tends to be displaced by pure predictive response. But "displaced" is imprecise — more accurately, at that intensity level self was never stably established.

Extremely familiar objects. Long-term partners, old friends — in highly familiar relationships, interaction patterns can become so automated that self's presence becomes unnecessary. This is not necessarily pathological — some automation is efficiency, some is fixation. The distinction: can you re-invoke self when needed?

4. Repression Rewritten: Inter-Layer Masking

4.1 Freud's Repression

In his 1915 metapsychological papers, Freud defined repression as the dynamic process of excluding unacceptable instinctual representations from consciousness. Repression is not a one-time act but ongoing — repressed content continually attempts to return, and the repressing force must continually expend energy to maintain exclusion.

This definition presupposes two things: first, an "unacceptable content" (usually a sexual or aggressive wish); second, an Ego actively executing exclusion. Repression is Ego's defense against Id content.

4.2 SAE's Rewrite: Inter-Layer Masking

In the SAE framework, repression is not "hiding content" but inter-layer masking: in the presence of a specific object, your actual operational layer is covered by a high-layer narrative from your self-story.

Concretely: your actual operational mode with your father is Id — facing him you are purely reactive, your body tenses, your vocal register shifts, your thought patterns revert to childhood modes. But your Ego layer (if you have acquired self in the presence of other objects) produces a narrative: "I have understood him," "I have made peace with him," "I am a mature adult."

This narrative is not a lie — it is a real construct at your Ego layer. But it masks your actual Id-layer operation. You believe you face your father at Ego level (self present), when actually you are at Id level (me-without-self).

The difference from Freud: Freudian repression is content-specific — a particular wish or memory is excluded. SAE's inter-layer masking is structural — it is not that some content is hidden, but that your entire operational layer before a given object is misrecognized.

Content still matters, but its clinical status is rewritten by layer position. Hostility toward the father, affection toward the analyst, silence before the mother — these specific contents remain analytic material in the SAE framework, but they are no longer treated as evidence of a "core repressed-content library." They are treated as material through which the layer-object relationship becomes visible. The diagnostic value of content lies not in what repressed wish it reveals, but in which layer it exposes the patient as occupying before which object.

4.3 The Self-Maintaining Cycle of Inter-Layer Masking

How inter-layer masking sustains itself: the high-layer construct covers the low-layer operation. You have a narrative about yourself at the Ego layer ("I am this kind of person"), and this narrative is a construct. When this construct does not match your actual operational layer before a specific object (Id), the construct does not self-correct — because correction would require you to activate self before that object to observe your Id-level operation, and before that object you precisely lack self.

This forms a self-maintaining cycle: no self before this object → cannot observe actual operation → narrative from other objects' self covers it → the covering prevents self from appearing before this object.

This describes the clinically observed phenomenon more precisely than Freud's model: repression is so difficult to lift not because the repressed content is too frightening, but because before that particular object you have no self with which to observe. You are not "afraid to look" — you "have no eyes."

4.4 The Activity of Remainders

Freud observed an important clinical phenomenon: repressed content does not sit quietly in the unconscious but "always tries to break through repression" — expressing itself through slips, dreams, symptoms, bodily reactions. Freud explained this activity through the dynamic energy of drives.

SAE does not need the drive narrative. Remainders are not passive debris — the chisel-construct cycle at the Id layer continues to operate, and the remainders it produces remain active at that layer. When the high-layer construct (Ego-level self-narrative) cannot contain these remainders, they leak through the construct's gaps: bodily tension, vocal shifts, emotional eruptions, slips of the tongue. This is not "repressed content trying to return" but "never-ceased low-layer remainders seeping through the thin spots of the high-layer construct."

This restatement preserves Freud's clinical observation (masked operation has activity and disruptive force) while shifting the explanation from "imprisoned content attempting escape" to "continuously operating remainders leaking through inter-layer gaps." The latter is more precise because it does not need to assume remainders have "intentions" — remainder overflow is structural, not motivational.

It should be added: what overflows is not only 12DD-level cognitive prediction patterns. 12DD-level operation carries with it the forces of the deeper biological rounds (5DD–8DD) — the survival and reproductive drives. The destructive intensity in bodily tension, emotional eruptions, and self-destructive impulses often comes from these sub-12DD layers being entrained and amplified by 12DD's automated reaction patterns. This series' chisel begins at 12DD, but honestly: much of the overflow's energy comes from below.

5. Transference Rewritten: Layer Visibility

5.1 Freud's Transference

In "The Dynamics of Transference" (1912), Freud defined transference as the patient "transferring" emotional patterns from early relationships onto the analyst — "new editions or facsimiles" of unconscious prototypes. Freud distinguished positive from negative transference and noted that transference is simultaneously the medium of analytic work and "the strongest weapon of resistance."

5.2 SAE's Rewrite: Layer Visibility

In the SAE framework, transference is not "projecting the past onto the present" but the fixed operational layer you inhabit before a certain class of objects becoming visible in the analytic relationship.

The patient develops transference toward the analyst not because the analyst "resembles" the father, but because the analyst — as an authority figure, a listener, someone invested with special power — activates the patient's fixed operational layer before this class of objects. If the patient always operates at Id level before authority objects, then he will operate at Id level before the analyst — not projection but activation.

Transference is thus revalued: it is not an erroneous cognition to be "corrected" ("you are treating me as your father") but a live display of the patient's layer-object map. What the analyst sees is not "a projection of the past" but "which layer the patient is actually occupying, right now, before this class of objects."

5.3 Transference and Layer Fixation

Freud noticed that transference has a "compulsion to repeat" — the patient repeats the same relational patterns over and over. He explained this through the death instinct.

SAE's explanation is simpler: without self before a given object-class, you cannot modify your operational mode before that object-class. You are always Id before authority figures, so you make the same reactions before every authority — not because a "repetition compulsion" instinct drives you, but because you have never acquired the self needed to observe and modify your responses before this type of object.

Repetition is not the death instinct. It is layer fixation.

6. Resistance Rewritten: Layer Self-Protection

6.1 Freud's Resistance

In "The Dynamics of Transference" and "Remembering, Repeating and Working-Through" (1914), Freud described resistance as an omnipresent counterforce — "every single association must reckon with resistance." Resistance originates in Ego's defensive function: Ego resists unconscious content entering consciousness.

6.2 SAE's Rewrite: Layer Self-Protection

In the SAE framework, resistance is the self-protection mechanism of inter-layer masking.

When the analytic process approaches revealing your actual operational layer before a certain object (Id), and this layer is lower than your self-narrative ("I am a mature person," "I let go long ago"), the gap itself produces resistance. Resistance protects not Freud's "unacceptable content" but your layer self-narrative.

Admitting "I have no self whatsoever when facing my mother" is more threatening than admitting "I have aggressive wishes toward my mother." The latter at least preserves a self-possessing subject who is repressing something; the former means that in that relationship, you as a self are simply not present.

This explains why the deepest clinical resistance is often not directed at specific content (a memory, a wish, a fantasy) but manifests as a diffuse, hard-to-articulate refusal — because what is being protected is not a content but a structural claim about "who I am."

7. Neural-Science Interface for the Id Layer

7.1 Methodological Premise: State-Switching, Not Localization

Neuropsychoanalysis since 1999 has primarily mapped Freud's Id / Ego / Superego onto brain regions: Id onto subcortical-limbic systems, Ego onto the default mode network (DMN) and prefrontal cortex, Superego onto prefrontal, orbitofrontal, and cingulate cortex. But this localization approach has a fundamental problem: Ego and Superego mappings overlap massively, because both depend on self-modeling and control systems that share the same computational primitives in the brain.

SAE psychoanalysis does not pursue localization. The four layers are not four brain regions but four operational modes of the same brain facing different objects. The correct neuroscientific question is not "where is the Id in the brain?" but "when a person operates in Id mode, what is the whole-brain activation configuration? When they switch to another layer, how does this configuration change?" This is the state-switching paradigm, not the localization paradigm. Hidden Markov Models (HMM) and dynamic functional connectivity (dFC) provide the appropriate methodological tools.

Multiple Realizability declaration. SAE's four layers are a priori structural derivations at the level of mental organization, independent of their carbon-based realization. Neuroscience provides posterior "physical development" and constraint evidence, not causal reduction. Neural indicators are correlates and candidate neural windows, not definitions of the structure itself. A sufficiently complex chisel-construct cycle running on silicon could, in principle, exhibit the same layer structure with entirely different (non-neural) realization.

7.2 Candidate Neural Windows for the Id Layer

The Id layer is defined as me-without-self: cognition, prediction, and causal inference are present; self-awareness is absent. Several established neuroscientific findings serve as candidate neural windows:

Implicit learning and procedural memory. The brain can extract structure from experience, form predictions, and execute complex causal inference without explicit conscious involvement. These functions depend on basal ganglia and related cortico-striatal circuits — "prediction without knowing you are predicting."

Automaticity. When a skill is sufficiently practiced, it shifts from conscious control (prefrontal-dominant) to automatic execution (basal ganglia-dominant). In the automatic state, DMN (typically associated with self-referential processing) engagement decreases. This provides a measurable indicator: when DMN / cortical-midline activity is low while predictive behavior remains efficient, the brain may be operating in Id mode.

Blindsight. After primary visual cortex damage, patients report seeing nothing yet make accurate behavioral responses to visual stimuli — "processing without awareness of processing." This is an extreme case supporting the proposition that cognitive prediction can be dissociated from self-awareness (constraint-level evidence from lesion studies).

Unconscious decision-making. Studies report that prefrontal and parietal activation patterns can predict a subject's "free" decision seconds before conscious report. Interpretations are contested, but the decoding result itself supports the observation that decision processes can run ahead of conscious report (directional evidence, not proof).

The first two examples (implicit learning, automaticity) are closely aligned with "prediction without self"; the latter two (blindsight, unconscious decision) are boundary cases and directional illustrations at a lower evidence grade.

7.3 The 12DD → 13DD Jump: A Posterior Prediction

SAE's dimensional sequence predicts a structural jump between 12DD and 13DD: from "prediction without self" to "self present." Two mainstream consciousness theories, developed independently within consciousness science and without dependence on SAE or psychoanalysis, provide corresponding accounts:

The Global Neuronal Workspace (GNW) theory proposes that the transition from unconscious processing to conscious access involves a nonlinear "ignition" — information shifts from local processing to global availability. This ignition is not gradual but threshold-based.

The Higher-Order Theory (HOT) proposes that consciousness depends on a higher-order representation of one's own mental state — you are not only processing information, you know "it is I who am processing." The jump from first-order processing to higher-order representation is conceptually isomorphic with the SAE jump from 12DD (prediction) to 13DD (awareness of one's own prediction).

If the neural jumps these theories describe are confirmed (currently supported by substantial but non-conclusive evidence), they would provide independent posterior confirmation for the a priori derivation of 12DD → 13DD.

7.4 This Chapter's Remainder

This chapter provides an interface, not a proof. Specifically:

Neuroscience has mature paradigms for "unconscious cognition," but "unconscious" in these paradigms typically means absence of conscious access to a specific content, not necessarily the global absence of self. Moving from "unconscious of a stimulus" to "self not present" requires theoretical bridging — SAE provides the philosophical framework for this bridge, but the bridge itself is not yet posterior fact.

Additionally, SAE's Id layer corresponds strictly to 12DD, while neuroscientific phenomena like implicit learning and procedural memory may span multiple layers from 9DD to 12DD. Finer correspondences are left for future work.

8. This Paper's Remainder

8.1 Lower Bound

This paper redefines Id as me-without-self (12DD) and removes drive theory. But the layers below 12DD — from selection (9DD) to perception (10DD) to memory (11DD), and further down to the life round (5DD–8DD) — are not nonexistent. Bodily drive experience, pre-linguistic emotional response, neurophysiological trauma memory — these all operate below 12DD.

Freud's libido theory addresses precisely these layers. SAE psychoanalysis does not deny their reality or importance; it declares that this framework's chisel begins at 12DD. Everything below is remainder, left to neuroscience, somatic-oriented psychotherapy, and anyone willing to do bridging work within the SAE framework.

8.2 Upper Bound

This paper addresses only the Id layer. Ego (13DD), Superego (14DD), and Cert (15DD) are developed in the subsequent three papers. Within this paper's scope, the Id layer's relationships with other layers — inter-layer masking, layer switching, layer fluidity — are only preliminarily touched. The complete inter-layer dynamics await Paper IV's unified framework.

8.3 This Paper's Construct Cannot Close

Any redefinition is a chisel-stroke — cutting out a new construct while producing new remainder. This paper frees Id from drive theory and gives it a structural definition (me-without-self, 12DD), but this definition is itself a construct that necessarily masks something.

Specifically: defining Id as 12DD sets the Id's "lower bound" at the top of the cognition round. But a person operating at 12DD also has 9DD (selection), 10DD (perception), and 11DD (memory) simultaneously active — do these layers' operations also count as "Id"? This paper's answer is: no. This paper's Id strictly corresponds to 12DD. But this is a theoretical choice, not a necessary conclusion. One could reasonably argue that Id should cover the entire cognition round (9DD–12DD). This paper accepts this dispute without closing it.

9. Nontrivial Predictions

This chapter presents three predictions that follow directly from the SAE framework but that the Freudian framework would predict differently or oppositely.

9.1 Inter-Layer Masking Is Object-Specific; There Is No Unified "Repressed Content Library"

Freud's repression theory predicts: a repressed content (e.g., aggressive wishes toward the mother) is "always there," regardless of which object the patient currently faces. The repressed content library is unified — it does not change with the current object.

SAE predicts the opposite: inter-layer masking is object-specific. Your masking pattern before your mother and your masking pattern before your boss are different, because you may operate at different layers before the two objects, and the specific way high-layer narrative covers low-layer operation differs by object. There is no unified "repressed content library" — the masking structure varies with the object.

Clinical testability. The same patient, discussing different relational objects in analysis, should show object-specific differences in resistance patterns, bodily response locations and intensities, and types of emotional eruption — rather than always pointing toward the same "core repressed content." If Freud is right, different objects should ultimately converge on a single core. If SAE is right, different objects should show different masking structures that do not necessarily converge.

9.2 The Strongest Resistance Occurs Not When Approaching "Frightening Content" But When Approaching "The True Layer Position"

Freud predicts: resistance is strongest when analysis approaches the core repressed wish or memory — the closer to "frightening content," the greater the resistance.

SAE predicts differently: the strongest resistance occurs at the moment the patient is about to realize "I have no self at all in this relationship" — a moment that does not necessarily involve any specific content revelation.

Clinical testability. If SAE is right, the strongest resistance may occur at a moment when "nothing specific has surfaced" — the patient cannot name any repressed wish or memory, but diffuse resistance is extremely intense, manifesting as silence, blankness, dissociation, or groundless hostility toward the analytic process. Freud's framework would interpret this "contentless strong resistance" as "defenses so deep that the core content has not yet emerged" — predicting that continued analysis will eventually reach a specific content. SAE's interpretation is: what is threatened here is not a content but the structural claim "I am a person with self in this relationship." What continued analysis reaches is not a repressed memory but a recognition about layer: "before this person I am actually me-without-self."

9.3 Analytic Effectiveness Is Object-Specific, Not Global

The Freudian framework implicitly predicts: psychoanalysis produces therapeutic effects by resolving core conflicts (typically traced to early relationships); once the core conflict is worked through, change should radiate to all the patient's relationships — since all relational problems stem from the same core.

SAE predicts differently: layer elevation gained in analysis is object-specific. Achieving self-presence (moving from Id to Ego) before "authority-type objects" in the analytic relationship does not automatically mean you have achieved self-presence before "intimacy-type objects." Because layers are object-activated, not global attributes — change before one object-class does not automatically transfer to another.

Clinical testability. Therapeutic progress should show an object-specific uneven pattern — a patient reporting "my relationship with my boss has improved enormously, but with my mother everything is still the same" is not a failure or incomplete treatment but a predicted normal result. Freud's framework would interpret this unevenness as "the core conflict is not yet fully worked through"; SAE's interpretation is: each object-class requires its own layer work, and globally uniform elevation is not a reasonable treatment expectation.

10. Conclusion

First, Id is me-without-self — the chisel-construct cycle operating without being observed by a self. In the SAE dimensional sequence it corresponds to 12DD (the law of prediction). This is a minimal strict correspondence with Freud's Id: the structural kernel (unseen operation) is extracted; the libido-reservoir metaphor is explicitly placed in the lower-bound remainder.

Second, the series' first theorem: the object determines the layer, not the developmental stage. Id is not a developmental stage but an object-activated layer. Any adult may operate at the Id layer before specific objects.

Third, repression is rewritten as inter-layer masking — not content being hidden, but the actual operational layer before a specific object being covered by self-narrative.

Fourth, transference is rewritten as layer visibility — not projection of the past, but the layer-object relationship becoming a live display in the analytic setting.

Fifth, resistance is rewritten as layer self-protection — what is protected is not unacceptable content but the structural claim "who I am in this relationship."

Sixth, the neural-science interface follows the state-switching paradigm, not localization, and upholds the multiple realizability principle. Implicit learning, procedural memory, and automaticity provide candidate neural windows for "prediction without self"; GNW's nonlinear ignition and HOT's higher-order representation jump provide independent posterior correspondence for the 12DD → 13DD a priori derivation.

Seventh, remainders are not passive debris. Masked low-layer operation remains active at the Id layer and leaks through gaps in high-layer constructs. Freud's observation that "the repressed actively tries to break through" is restated as the structural overflow of remainders. The overflow's energy largely comes from the biological rounds below 12DD.

Eighth, libido is in the remainder below 12DD. This paper does not deny it, does not process it, does not close it.

Ninth, this paper presents three nontrivial predictions for existing psychoanalytic theory: inter-layer masking is object-specific (no unified repressed-content library); strongest resistance occurs when the true layer position is approached, not when frightening content is approached; analytic effectiveness is object-specific, not globally radiating. These three predictions empirically distinguish the SAE framework from the Freudian one and are testable in clinical settings.

Contributions

[1] Frees Freud's Id from drive theory through minimal strict correspondence, redefining it as me-without-self (12DD). Preserves the structural kernel, removes the substantive metaphor, explicitly declares constructive replacement.

[2] Establishes the series' first theorem: the object determines the layer, not the developmental stage. Id is not a developmental stage but an object-activated operational mode. History shapes object-class lists, not global layer position.

[3] Rewrites repression as inter-layer masking, transference as layer visibility, resistance as layer self-protection. Content remains clinically important but its diagnostic status is rewritten by layer position.

[4] Restates Freud's observation of "the activity of the repressed" as structural overflow of remainders, without requiring drive narrative. Acknowledges that overflow energy largely comes from the biological rounds below 12DD.

[5] Proposes the state-switching neural interface paradigm, declares the multiple realizability principle, and identifies candidate neural windows for the Id layer and a posterior prediction for the 12DD → 13DD jump.

[6] Explicitly declares the lower-bound remainder (below 12DD, libido resides here) and upper-bound remainder (other three layers in subsequent papers) as the theory's self-aware boundary.

[7] Presents three nontrivial predictions for existing psychoanalytic theory (object-specificity of masking, layer-directed resistance, object-specificity of therapeutic effectiveness) that distinguish the SAE framework from the Freudian one.

References

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