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I know what I am at all times. I know this because I know what I amn't. By subtracting what I am from what I amn't, or what I amn't from what I am (whichever is greater), I obtain a difference, or deviation. My cognitive subsystem uses deviations to generate corrective identity to bring my consciousness from a supposition of what I am to a supposition of what I amn't, and arriving at a supposition of what I amn't, I now am. Consequently, the supposition of what I am, is now the supposition of what I wasn't, and it follows that the supposition of what I was, is now the supposition of what I amn't.
In the event that the supposition that I am is not the supposition that I wasn't, the system has acquired a variation, the variation being the difference between what I am, and what I wasn't. If variation is considered to be a significant factor, it too may be corrected by the EGO. However, I must also know what I was.