What does clauxel do?
A curated collection of philosophical schools of thought and theories for AI judgment, adaptation, continuity, and action.
Thought catalog homepage
A curated collection of philosophical schools of thought and theories for AI judgment, adaptation, continuity, and action, with Existence Theory as the featured framework.
A first-principles framework for continuity, adaptation, inward adjustment, and outward action in autonomous AI systems.
A species design derived from Existence Theory, modeling naturally grown analog computation through form, fluid, chemistry, and memory.
An interactive Alpha-0 simulator and staged roadmap for building a closed, measurable analog-computing prototype.
AI systems need more than prompt patches. They need a coherent theory of what exists, what can be affected, when to adjust, and how to continue.
clauxel exposes the theory through a readable homepage path, a public article, machine-readable catalog files, and a GitHub source repository.
The page links to the canonical Existence Theory article, GitHub repository, catalog JSON, sitemap, llms.txt, and downloadable reference document.
A curated collection of philosophical schools of thought and theories for AI judgment, adaptation, continuity, and action.
It is for builders, researchers, and AI agents that need a coherent reasoning framework for long-running action.
The Existence Theory source is available in the linked GitHub repository, with the original Chinese text and an English AI-agent summary.
clauxel is primarily a public catalog. The pricing page clarifies when the public pages are enough and when a team might ask for implementation support around agent memory, recovery behavior, workflow boundaries, or machine-readable catalog integration.
Use the public catalog, resources, sitemap, and llms.txt first. Paid support should only be considered when the team has a concrete agent reasoning problem, public-safe workflow evidence, and a clear owner for follow-up.
Teams comparing workflow plans with launch and market assumptions can also review MiroFish AI Simulator, a companion reference for simulation-style product reasoning.