Abstract
Human cognition operates in two qualitatively distinct temporal regimes—not metaphorical but structural. The sequential regime (Chronos) processes information through progressive chaining, step-by-step verification, and causal linearity. The configurational regime (Kairos) processes information through simultaneous integration of multiple variables, detection of emergent patterns, and volumetric perception of time. This paper argues that the Kairos/Chronos distinction is not a literary figure or philosophical speculation but a technical difference in cognitive architecture with measurable consequences for the capacity of anticipation and systemic correction. The operational coexistence of both regimes is the condition of possibility for complex cognition; their decoupling is the mechanism of pathological dissociation. The article proposes an ontological model of two temporal processing channels, contrasts it with available evidence from neuroscience—hemispheric processing, predictive cognition, altered states of consciousness—and explores its applications in decision-making under uncertainty, systemic leadership, and creativity



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