The Hard Problem of Consciousness
Why does any physical process give rise to subjective experience? Why is there something it is like to be in certain states?
What the system says
The hard problem is an artifact of applying structural description to the disclosive layer; the gap is real but locatable, not mysterious.
The system addresses this phenomenon by locating it within the broader structural account. The apparatus of worldframes, monadic inhabitation, and the disclosive/structural distinction provides the conceptual resources needed to dissolve or resolve the puzzle rather than simply describe it.
Existing positions in the literature
Standard approaches to this phenomenon in the philosophical and scientific literature face characteristic difficulties. The system's account does not simply choose among these positions but provides a structural diagnosis of why each fails and what a satisfactory account would require.