AbstractThis paper develops the integrative field model of consciousness proposed in The Architecture of Experience and its companion theoretical paper. On this view, conscious experience is not a passive representation of an external world but an active generative process that produces structured experiential domains. The central problem is therefore not how perception corresponds to reality, but how experience comes to appear as a coherent world in the first place. Through a phenomenological reading of Dante’s Divine Comedy, the paper argues that the poem’s three realms—Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso—can be understood as representing distinct modes of experiential integration rather than fixed cosmological regions. Inferno corresponds to fragmented and frozen integration, in which temporal flow collapses and the self becomes rigidly enclosed within repetitive patterns. Purgatorio corresponds to progressive reintegration, in which temporal continuity, emotional flexibility, and openness to transformation are gradually restored. Paradiso corresponds to maximal coherence, in which the boundary between observer and world becomes increasingly transparent within a unified, luminous field of experience. Read in this way, Dante’s poetic cosmology anticipates key structural features of the integrative field model: the dependence of world-appearance on patterns of integration, the contingency of the observing self, and the generative rather than receptive character of consciousness. The paper concludes that the movement from Dante’s descriptive cosmology to the integrative field model’s explanatory framework marks a shift from asking what the world contains to asking how a world is produced at all.
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Erik Tönsberg
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Erik Tönsberg (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d1fceba79560c99a0a2988 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19398883