SHORT DESCRIPTION (EN) A reflection on interiority as a non‑local field where the eternal present holds compressed information awaiting emergence. The text explores how reality unfolds layer by layer through conception, and how interiority functions as a portal to a deeper collective field beyond space, time, and physical form. ABSTRACT (EN) As Land That Appears explores interiority as a non‑local place accessible only under specific conditions of consciousness. The text describes interiority as a portal to a deeper field, similar to a collective super‑conscious, where the eternal present holds in compressed form everything that may emerge into reality. Emergence occurs through conception: what is not conceived does not exist, and what is conceived begins to appear as a new layer of one’s reality. The work examines the nature of non‑linear time, informational decoding, and the necessity of an even deeper field that contains the complete compressed memory of existence. OPENAIRE DESCRIPTION (EN) As Land That Appears investigates interiority as a non‑local container connected to the eternal present, a field where all information exists in compressed form before emerging into reality. The text introduces the idea of a collective super‑conscious underlying individual interiority and describes emergence as a process regulated by conception: only what can be conceived becomes part of one’s reality. It proposes a non‑linear model of time in which the eternal present is not merely a repository of the past but an active field containing what is yet to appear. The work contributes to the theoretical architecture of The Liminal Field, offering insights into interiority, informational decoding, and the deeper field that holds the complete memory of existence. EXTENDED DESCRIPTION (EN) Extended Description — As Land That Appears This work examines interiority as a non‑local field accessible only under specific conditions of consciousness. Rather than treating interiority as a psychological space, the text presents it as a portal to a deeper, non‑spatial domain connected to the eternal present. This domain functions as a compressed repository of all potential information, from which reality gradually emerges. The narrative introduces the idea that interiority is not merely individual but resonates with a collective super‑conscious, a field deeper than the traditional notion of the collective unconscious. This field is both synthesis and unfolding: it contains everything in compressed form while enabling the gradual emergence of new layers of reality. Emergence is described as a process governed by conception. What is not conceived does not exist; what becomes conceivable begins to appear as an additional layer of one’s reality. This challenges the assumption that reality is identical for all individuals, suggesting instead that each person’s reality depends on the depth of what they can conceive within their interiority. The text reframes the eternal present not as a static container of the past but as an active field that includes what is yet to emerge. Decoding becomes the function that transforms compressed information into perceivable reality, operating through the animation field at the sub‑subatomic level. Finally, the work argues for the necessity of an even deeper field beneath animation — a foundational domain that holds the complete compressed memory of existence. This “origin field” provides the structural basis for interiority, emergence, and the unfolding of reality.
Oliva FMOO (Fri,) studied this question.