Abstract The text explores the phenomenology of liminal layers as perceptible stratifications that progressively emerge to form an interdimensional lens. Depth clarifies rather than obscures, transforming a bidimensional surface into a transparent tridimensional vision. The liminal field appears as an energetic membrane composed of overlapping layers that reveal the deep structure of inner perception. OpenAIRE Description This work investigates the phenomenology of liminal layers as progressive, perceptible stratifications forming an interdimensional lens of depth. Through visual and conceptual crossing, the text describes how consciousness perceives the transition from a bidimensional surface to a transparent tridimensional vision. Each layer unfolds as an energetic membrane revealing the inner structure of perception, where depth clarifies rather than obscures. The study situates the liminal field within a broader ontology of consciousness, resonance, and interdimensional transparency, contributing to the theoretical framework of morphogenetic and phenomenological models of awareness. Extended Description Liminal Layers examines the perceptual and ontological structure of the liminal field as a multi‑layered, progressively emergent phenomenon. The work describes how consciousness initially encounters a bidimensional surface—perceived as a dotted, vibrating membrane—before recognizing its intrinsic depth through a gradual process of attunement and intentional observation. The liminal field is conceptualized as a stratified energetic membrane, composed of overlapping layers that unfold to reveal a tridimensional structure previously compressed into apparent linearity. This unfolding does not obscure perception; instead, it increases clarity and transparency, functioning as an interdimensional lens that amplifies depth. Through this phenomenological progression, the work positions liminality as a dynamic interface between perceptual states, where consciousness transitions from passive reception to active scrutiny. The emergence of depth is presented not as metaphor but as a structural property of the liminal field itself, accessible through specific modes of awareness. The study contributes to theoretical models of consciousness, morphogenetic fields, and interdimensional perception by framing liminality as a domain where visual, energetic, and conceptual layers converge. It offers a structured account of how inner perception evolves from surface‑level impressions to transparent, superimposed tridimensional vision, aligning with broader ontologies of resonance, depth, and cognitive‑energetic interfaces. Keywords liminal field; layered perception; interdimensional depth; energetic membrane; consciousness; resonance; morphogenetic structure; transparency; phenomenology; inner vision; FMOO.
Oliva FMOO (Fri,) studied this question.