Abstract This paper presents The Architecture of Experience as an interdisciplinary research program concerned with consciousness and worldhood. The program proposes that conscious experience is not a passive representation of an external reality but an active, generative process through which coherent experiential worlds emerge. The central problem is therefore not how perception corresponds to an already constituted world, but how a world becomes organised as a domain of significance, orientation, and possibility in the first place. The research program consists of a foundational theoretical account, the Integrative Field Model as its principal systems-level framework, empirical developments, phenomenological and interpretive applications, and an extended investigation into worldhood as a distinct explanatory problem. Together, these works argue that variations in experiential world-structure—including alterations in time, space, selfhood, significance, and meaning—correspond systematically to variations in patterns of integration and organisation. The program, therefore, shifts the study of consciousness from a representational framework to a generative one, reframing perception, selfhood, and worldhood as emergent outcomes of dynamic processes of integration. This paper serves as the central overview and entry point to The Architecture of Experience research program and its theoretical, empirical, phenomenological, and worldhood-oriented developments.
Erik Tönsberg (Mon,) studied this question.
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