Overview · GCT

Long-term shape for GCT

GCT (Geometric Consciousness Theory) is Pablo's most important ongoing work. The theory exists; the vehicle doesn't. This page formalizes the structural, naming, and identity options so Pablo can decide what kind of thing GCT becomes when it leaves the manuscript.

The question structural

The theoretical work needs a vehicle for stewardship, distribution, funding, IP protection, and continuity. Three forks exist. The right choice depends on intent — academic-research-first vs broader-audience-first vs both.

Structural forks choose one

A

Nonprofit foundation

Mexican A.C. or US 501(c)(3)

Right if GCT stays academic-research-first — manuscript → peer review → physicist + consciousness research community. Foundation owns the IP, runs research grants, signals "rigorous, mission-driven, not a get-rich scheme."

  • Pros: Highest credibility with physicists. Tax-exempt donations possible. IP separated from personal liability. Signals seriousness.
  • Cons: Mexican A.C. needs 3+ founders + governance overhead. US 501(c)(3) heavier setup. Can't easily distribute revenue if GCT-derived products ever generate it.
B

For-profit company

Mexican SAPI / US LLC

Right if GCT goes mass-market — books, courses, lectures, SaaS tools, conference circuit (Sam Harris / Lex pattern). Audience expects monetization; nonprofit framing fights the business model.

  • Pros: Cleaner tax + distribution. Can take investment if desired. Flexible. No governance overhead.
  • Cons: Loses physicist credibility — "for-profit consciousness theory" reads as new-age noise to the academic audience. Signals different intent.
C

Hybrid Tier 3 lean

Foundation + commercial arm — Mozilla / Wikipedia pattern

Foundation owns the canonical theory, manuscript, free educational content (mission integrity). A separate commercial entity handles consulting, courses, paid software, books. Revenue feeds back to the foundation as donations or licensing.

  • Pros: Resolves the "physicists vs broader audience" tension. Mission stays clean; revenue path stays open. Most flexible long-term.
  • Cons: Most complex setup. Two entities to maintain. Requires clarity on which content lives where.

"Above Spark Automations" — two readings

Naming directions 3 patterns · pick one to commit

Avoid: acronyms-as-name ("GCT Foundation" reads as software), "Consciousness" in the legal name (loses physicists in 1 second), personal-name vanity ("González Institute"). Examples below are directional, not committed — availability needs MARCANET + WHOIS check before lock.

Pattern 1 — Anchor on the geometry

Most defensible with physicists. Reads as a research institute. Slightly cold to general audience but that's the trade.

Geometry · 1
Lattice Institute
The 6D icosahedral lattice is the core construct. "Lattice" reads scientific to physicists, neutral to everyone else.
  • lattice.institute
  • lattice-institute.org
  • thelattice.org
Geometry · 2
Phason Foundation
The phason field (Φ⊥) is the mechanism that makes GCT distinctive. Specific term — physicists know it, layperson doesn't, which signals "rigorous, not pop science."
  • phason.foundation
  • phason.org
  • phasoninstitute.org
Geometry · 3
Icosa Research
Truncated form of icosahedral. Brandable, short, geometric. Less common than "lattice."
  • icosa.org
  • icosa.research
  • icosaresearch.org

Pattern 2 — Anchor on the function

Communicates what GCT does to outsiders without requiring jargon. Less Greek-letter weight.

Function · 1
Substrate Foundation
"Substrate Constraint" is a GCT theorem (the requirements for Level II consciousness). General-audience-readable; physicists recognize the term.
  • substrate.foundation
  • substrate.org
  • substrateinstitute.org
Function · 2
Selection Operator
F_sel — the actualization mechanism in GCT. Direct quote from the theory; serious people will look it up.
  • selectionoperator.org
  • fsel.org
  • selection.foundation
Function · 3
First-Principles Institute
Generic but on-brand. Communicates the methodology, not the theory. Low cost-of-entry to explain.
  • firstprinciples.institute
  • firstprinciples.org (likely taken)
  • fpi.org

Pattern 3 — Single-word concept

Most modern, brandable, hardest to lock (.org likely taken; .foundation often available). Closer to OpenAI / Anthropic / Calliope feel.

Concept · 1
Polaron
Identity Polaron is the load-bearing GCT construct (the macroscopic coherent topological defect = a unified conscious agent). Distinctive, brandable, specific.
  • polaron.foundation
  • polaron.org (likely taken — physics term)
  • polaron.institute
Concept · 2
Eidos
Greek: form, essence, archetype. Plato + Husserl resonance. Carries philosophical weight without sounding new-age.
  • eidos.foundation
  • eidos.org (likely taken)
  • eidos.institute
Concept · 3
Solenoid
"The Solenoid" is one corner of GCT's tripartite ontology (Field / Solenoid / Agent). Geometric + electromagnetic resonance. Very brandable.
  • solenoid.foundation
  • solenoid.org (likely taken)
  • solenoid.institute

Open questions answers shape the recommendation

1
Is GCT primarily academic (manuscript / journal / physicist audience) or broader (books / lectures / general audience), or both? Determines Fork A (academic), B (mass-market), or C (hybrid).
2
Should it ever generate revenue, or stay donation/grant-funded? Revenue path forces commercial entity (B or C); donation-only fits A.
3
Are you the sole steward, or do you imagine a board / collaborators (e.g., Diego, others)? Mexican A.C. needs 3+ founders by law. Solo stewardship → US LLC or sole-prop simpler.
4
Mexico-domiciled or US-domiciled? Affects entity type, tax, and credibility signal in different audiences. Mexico-domiciled aligns with where you live and operate; US-domiciled has more academic-funding pathways.

Default recommendation if Pablo says "decide for me"

This is a Tier 3 default — hands you something to either accept or push back on. The actual "right" answer needs the four open questions above answered.

Next steps if direction commits

  1. Pablo answers the 4 open questions (~10 min).
  2. Spark runs the lock checks: MARCANET (Mexican classes 41 + 42), WHOIS for URL candidates, Google for collisions with existing physics groups.
  3. Spark drafts the foundation charter (mission, governance, IP transfer language) + entity registration paperwork.
  4. Pablo + co-founders sign with e.firma → file with the relevant agency (Notaría for A.C., SAT for SAPI).
  5. Spark ports GCT/ folder structure to the new entity's repo (manuscript, derivations, simulations stay where they are; only IP ownership changes hands on paper).
  6. Spark sets up the public site (separate from spark-automations.com — under the new domain), aligned with GCT brand identity to be defined in a follow-up Brand pass.