Why do we become the particular persons we are, rather than any of the countless alternatives we might have been? This question precedes morality, psychology, and law. It is asked whenever we judge, diagnose, forgive, or punish. Yet most answers assume that identity is chosen, inherited as character, or consciously learned. This essay argues otherwise. Human identity emerges before intention, self-reflection, or moral reasoning exist. During early development, the brain passively accumulates associations and stabilizes them through Prediction Feedback (PF), a pre-conscious signal of predictive coherence. The resulting noetic horizon silently defines what feels natural, possible, and “like oneself.” Within this framework, crime and so-called perversions are not moral failures or genetic defects but intelligible outcomes of how identity stabilizes under unbalanced PF conditions. We are not the authors of who we are; we are the outcome of what once made our inner world coherent.

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