The Soul is not a fixed point. It is the long-term average of recurring attentional configurations.
Attention continuously moves. Over time, it settles into stable attractors.
These stable attractors define identity.
Focused Stability
Structured Awareness
Diffuse Awareness
These shapes represent measurable configurations of attention. Repeated measurement reveals attractors.
Choose a piece of music, chant, mantra, or sound.
Examples:
Allow attention to move naturally.
Do not attempt to force any state.
Simply observe.
Using the Preparation for Listening interface, adjust sliders to match direct experience:
There is no correct answer. Only accurate observation.
When the configuration matches your experience, save the posture.
The system records:
Repeat measurements across different sessions and stimuli.
Over time, patterns will emerge.
Stable configurations reveal attractors.
Stable attractor → persistent identity state
Rotating attractor → personality variation
Unstable attractor → transitional adaptation
Long-term average → Soul Equation
The participant is not being evaluated.
The participant operates the measurement interface.
The instrument records attentional configuration.
The participant is an observer of their own system.
CPMI provides a reproducible interface for observing and stabilizing attention states.
Longitudinal recordings reveal attractor structures.
This enables direct empirical study of Consciousness Dynamics.