Short Description (EN) A theoretical exploration of vibration as compressed information and the subconscious as a differentiated vibrational field. The text examines how depth, compression, and gravitational stability shape the structure of information, creating an energetic barrier that prevents direct access from the material plane. It introduces “logic of intuition” as the only viable mode for interpreting vibrational phenomena that exceed linear reasoning. Abstract (EN) This work develops a vibrational model of the subconscious as a field composed of compressed information and differentiated frequencies. It argues that vibration functions as a gravitationally stabilized nucleus capable of containing entire informational universes. Because this compressed information cannot be accessed through linear logic or material interfaces, it forms an energetic barrier between the I and the subconscious field. The text proposes that only a “logic of intuition” can interpret vibrational phenomena emerging from this domain, serving as a bridge between matter, energy, and depth‑based information. OpenAIRE Description (EN) This text presents a vibrational ontology in which compressed information generates frequencies that constitute the subconscious as a differentiated field of depth. It describes how gravitational stability prevents vibrational collapse and creates an energetic barrier that separates the material plane from the informational energetic plane. The work argues that linear logic cannot access compressed information due to its non‑local nature and proposes “logic of intuition” as a necessary interpretative mode. This model contributes to The Liminal Field by outlining the relationship between vibration, depth, information compression, and the limits of material cognition. Extended Description (EN) The Liminal Field: Logic of Intuition develops a structural model of vibration as compressed information and the subconscious as a differentiated vibrational field. The text begins by defining vibrations as compressed informational nuclei that generate frequencies. These frequencies form the architecture of the subconscious, which is described not as a linear surface but as a domain of depth—an intrinsic mechanism of differentiation. The work explains that compressed information behaves like a gravitational nucleus capable of containing entire informational universes. Because this information is not spatial and does not create volume, depth becomes the proportional measure of what vibration can contain. Compression itself provides gravitational stability, preventing vibrational collapse or uncontrolled expansion. This structure creates an illusory boundary between matter and energy: matter contains energy but cannot identify its state when the observer is located within the same field as the observed. This results in a non‑local condition that makes the nucleus of compressed information inaccessible from the material plane. The text argues that the subconscious, understood as a vibrational state, cannot interface directly with the I operating in the material field. The gravitationally stabilized compressed information becomes an energetic barrier that prevents access. Any attempt to interpret this field from the material plane results only in correlated arguments—anchors and navigational tools that hint at the underlying vibrational structure. Because linear logic cannot compute depth‑based vibrational phenomena, the work proposes “logic of intuition” as the necessary interpretative mode. Intuition becomes the only mechanism capable of engaging with vibrational information that exceeds the limits of material cognition.
Oliva FMOO (Tue,) studied this question.