Abstract This work examines sleep as an unrecognized interface of interiority and proposes a functional distinction between mind and consciousness. While the mind is responsible for reasoning, memory, and the recording of experience, it becomes inactive during sleep, leaving consciousness present but unregistered. The absence of memory in sleep is therefore attributed not to a separate “sleep‑consciousness” but to the temporary suspension of the mind. Sleep is presented as a natural access point to interiority, where consciousness remains active without mental interference. The text explores the liminal field as a training environment in which consciousness resonates with interiority and the mind can learn to receive emerging inner content without distorting it. The work outlines a model in which sleep, interiority, mind, and consciousness form a single system whose dynamics depend on resonance, frequency, and the selective presence or absence of mental functions. OpenAIRE Extended Description This text develops a functional model of consciousness based on the relationship between sleep, interiority, and the selective activity of the mind. It argues that consciousness remains constant across both wakefulness and sleep, while the mind—understood as the cognitive apparatus responsible for reasoning, memory, and conceptualization—operates only within the vibrational conditions of the waking field. Sleep is therefore conceptualized as an interface of interiority: a field in which consciousness is present but unaccompanied by the mind, resulting in the absence of memory and the emergence of non‑conceptual inner content. The work introduces the liminal field as a resonance‑based environment that mediates between interiority and wakefulness. In this field, consciousness maintains its neutrality while the mind can be trained to receive and structure emerging inner phenomena without imposing interpretative frameworks. The text proposes a topological and frequency‑based understanding of states of being, where the presence or absence of the mind depends on the vibrational characteristics of the field. This approach reframes sleep not as a discontinuity of consciousness but as a functional domain essential for the emergence, transmission, and stabilization of inner reality.
Oliva FMOO (Mon,) studied this question.