The Rhizosphere Cognition Model (RCM) proposes a systems-theoretical and phenomenological framework for describing nonlinear, polymathic, and trauma-adapted cognition. Rather than treating conscious thought as the output of a single internal narrator or fixed central authority, RCM conceptualizes cognition as an integration event emerging from multiple functional processing nodes operating through a shared subconscious exchange layer. These nodes are not proposed as discrete anatomical structures, literal brain modules, or personality fragments. They are heuristic constructs for describing recurring cognitive-emotional operations, including analytic reasoning, somatic awareness, interpersonal pattern detection, affective salience, symbolic synthesis, strategic planning, and conflict-laden or suppressed material. RCM draws conceptually from distributed cognition, predictive processing, adult neuroplasticity, executive function research, and post-traumatic growth. The model aims to provide a coherent vocabulary for individuals whose cognition is experienced as multi-threaded, associative, pattern-sensitive, and dynamically integrated across logic, intuition, memory, affect, metaphor, and embodied perception. RCM is presented as a conceptual framework requiring further empirical refinement, interdisciplinary critique, and possible operationalization.
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