Short Description (EN) A conceptual analysis of the transition from becoming to being and acting within the field of animation. The text describes how action emerges from interiority as a compressed, pre‑existing whole that unfolds according to need and time. It introduces the idea that conception is the regulator of emergence and that higher presences may conceive more deeply, accessing futures already unfolded. Abstract (EN) This work explores the shift from unconscious becoming to conscious being and acting within the informational field of animation. It argues that once a stage has been conceived and realized, the individual enters a new state of awareness where action is no longer interrogative but transmissive. The text describes interiority as a compressed totality that unfolds according to need and time, suggesting that emergence is regulated by conception. It concludes by proposing that deeper presences may conceive more fully, accessing futures already emerged within compressed time. OpenAIRE Description (EN) This text develops an ontological model in which becoming, being, and acting are redefined through the field of animation. It describes how awareness replaces unconscious searching once a conceived stage is realized. Interiority is presented as a compressed totality whose contents emerge according to need and temporal regulation. The work contributes to The Liminal Field by defining conception as the intrinsic program of emergence and by introducing the possibility that higher presences may access fully emerged futures within compressed time. Extended Description (EN) The Liminal Field: Becoming, Being, Acting examines the transformation that occurs when an individual moves from unconscious becoming to conscious being and acting. The text begins by asserting that the difference lies in conception: once a stage has been conceived and achieved, the individual acquires a new state of awareness that no longer searches or questions. This new awareness operates within the field of animation, a domain where action is not planned but transmitted. Action becomes a vector that unfolds what is already present in interiority, which is described as a compressed totality containing all necessary information. The unfolding of this compressed content depends on two regulators: need and time. These do not represent choices but conditions that allow what already exists to emerge. The text introduces the idea that emergence is not creation but revelation of what is already complete within interiority. Because conception is not limited to humans, the work suggests that higher presences may conceive more deeply, allowing them to access fully emerged futures within compressed time. This implies that the future may already be present for those capable of conceiving it. The notion of “empty space” is reinterpreted as space filled with unperceived content. This space acts as a connective medium that eliminates intervals and distances, making conception instantaneous when sufficiently expanded. The text concludes with an equivalence: need relates to compressed time as emergence relates to conception. This formula outlines a potential method for measuring the instantaneity of emergence.
Oliva FMOO (Sat,) studied this question.