Short Description (EN) A conceptual exploration of inner energetic worlds underlying the physical body. The text proposes that matter is sustained by multiple invisible energetic fields and that the subconscious functions as a living, informational environment where energy organizes, animates, and gives rise to matter through conception. Abstract (EN) This work examines the existence of “other worlds” within the human being, understood as energetic fields underlying the physical body. It argues that the body is animated and sustained by increasingly complex energetic layers that remain invisible to ordinary perception. The text highlights the conceptual gap between visible matter and its energetic foundation, proposing that conception—rather than vision—is the true gateway to perceiving these fields. The subconscious is described as a living, informational domain where energy organizes thought and supports the emergence of matter. The work concludes that intuition and conception can lead to the appearance of energy as animating presence. OpenAIRE Description (EN) This text develops a model of internal energetic worlds that sustain the physical body. It describes how matter depends on underlying energetic fields that are invisible yet detectable through appropriate instruments. The work identifies a conceptual gap between what is seen and what sustains it, arguing that conception must precede perception. The subconscious is presented as an energetic, informational environment where thought and energy interact. The text contributes to The Liminal Field by outlining how conception and intuition enable access to non‑visible energetic structures and support the emergence of matter from informed energy. Extended Description (EN) The Liminal Field: Other Worlds explores the hypothesis that the physical body is sustained by multiple energetic fields that constitute “other worlds” within the human being. The text begins by asserting that matter requires an underlying energetic field to exist, implying that the body contains internal layers of energy that animate and support its functions. These energetic fields are invisible because they are not material, yet their presence can be confirmed through appropriate instrumentation. This creates a conceptual gap between visible matter and its energetic foundation: what sustains the body is not immediately apparent and must be conceived before it can be perceived. The work argues that ordinary logic must be restructured to account for invisible energetic fields. Thought is used as an analogy: although it cannot be seen, its existence is undeniable. Similarly, energetic fields must be conceived before they can be recognized. The subconscious is described as an environment of living energy—a domain where thoughts gather, interact, and organize. Energy is defined as “alive” because it animates matter and possesses an informational state that prevents chaos and indeterminacy. The emergence of matter is presented as a gradual process in which informed energy becomes visible through conception. The text concludes that conception is a functional tool that can evolve into intuition, ultimately allowing the appearance of energy as animating presence.
Oliva FMOO (Wed,) studied this question.