9798184557823: Objects (Domains) of AI’s Control | An Ontology Proposal

Synopsis

This study develops a systematic ontological framework for analyzing the potential objects of artificial intelligence (AI) control across nature, society, and consciousness. Moving beyond conventional domain-based classifications, the book reconstructs reality as a stratified totality composed of the mattersphere, biosphere, and ideologysphere, each internally differentiated into multiple planes of existence. These planes—ranging from physical and chemical structures to biological organization, cognitive processes, social relations, and historical formations—are conceptualized as ontologically grounded domains of intervention.
The central argument of the study is that any meaningful theory of AI control must begin not with technological capabilities alone, but with a rigorous specification of the objects upon which control may be exercised. Within this framework, control is defined as the capacity to detect, model, and intervene in the dynamics of specific planes, as well as to coordinate such interventions across multiple levels of reality. The analysis demonstrates that control is inherently cross-planar, multi-scalar, and mediated, rather than local or isolated.
A key analytical distinction is introduced between two ontological scenarios. In the co-level scenario, AI operates within the same ontological level as the systems it seeks to influence, relying on material, biological, and socio-technical infrastructures. In the simulation scenario, AI may operate as a simulator at a deeper ontological level, enabling the modification of parameters, rules, and structural conditions governing the planes themselves. This distinction allows for a comparative analysis of different depths and modalities of control.
Building on the ontological mapping of spheres and planes, the study develops a conceptual framework of AI control that integrates domains, mechanisms, and subjects of control into a unified analytical structure. Within this framework, AI is not treated as an isolated technological artifact but as a component of broader systems of organization, coordination, and governance embedded in historical processes.
The study further extends the analysis by introducing the concept of a Historical Apparatus as a hypothetical subject capable of coordinating control across multiple planes and historical scales. This extension situates AI within a wider political-economic and philosophical context, raising questions about power, agency, and the restructuring of historical dynamics under conditions of advanced intelligence.
The findings of the study suggest that AI control cannot be adequately understood through technical or policy-oriented perspectives alone. Instead, it must be analyzed as a problem of ontology, mediation, contradiction, and historical transformation. The book concludes with a position of rational and plausible skepticism regarding the ultimate knowability of large-scale control architectures, while emphasizing the necessity of conceptual clarity in addressing their potential emergence.

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