Conceptual impressions surrounding this post have yet to be substantiated, corroborated, confirmed or woven into a larger argument, context or network. Objective: To generate symbolic links between scientific discovery, design awareness and consciousness.
I. A Starting Premise
Every framework for understanding reality must begin somewhere ... with matter, with God, with information, or with experience. This one begins with design.
To place design at the apex of reality is not to reduce it to aesthetics or engineering. It is to propose that design is the fundamental principle by which potential becomes actual the hidden logic through which formless possibility coheres into perceivable, meaningful form. From this premise, two of the most discussed and least understood features of human existence, consciousness and awareness, can be seen in a new light: not as separate phenomena requiring separate explanations, but as dynamically interdependent expressions of a single living field, governed by the organizing logic of design.
To make this relationship concrete, consider a tornado.
II. The Field and the Vortex
A tornado does not create the atmosphere. It arises from it. The vast system of temperature gradients, pressure differentials, humidity, and rotational energy that fills the sky is entirely invisible under ordinary conditions, present everywhere, perceived nowhere. Then, under the right relational conditions, something concentrates. A vortex forms. The invisible becomes visible, the diffuse becomes directed, and the potential becomes an event.
This is precisely the relationship between consciousness and awareness proposed here.
Consciousness is the atmosphere ... the immense, invisible field of potential within which all experience, meaning, and perception become possible. It is not itself a thing or an event. It is the pre-condition for things and events: boundless, structureless in itself, yet containing all the conditions necessary for structure to emerge. Awareness, by contrast, is the tornado ... focused, directional, locally formative, and always composed entirely of the field it appears to have separated from.
The philosopher Alfred North Whitehead described reality as grounded in what he called an "extensive continuum" ... a relational field of potential from which all actual occasions of experience arise (Whitehead, 1978). Consciousness, in the framework proposed here, occupies that role: the continuum that underlies and enables every event of awareness. David Bohm extended a structurally identical insight into physics with his concept of the implicate order ... an enfolded totality from which all visible, localized phenomena unfold into what he called the explicate order (Bohm, 1980). Consciousness is the implicate; awareness is the explicate. The sky is the implicate; the tornado is the explicate.
What makes this more than analogy is the precision of the structural parallel: in both cases, the manifest form is entirely composed of the field from which it emerged. The tornado is not separate from the atmosphere ... it is the atmosphere, locally organized. Awareness is not separate from consciousness ... it is consciousness, locally directed.
III. Awareness as Intentional Act
The tornado does not simply exist ... it moves, it acts, it transforms what it contacts. Awareness shares this character. It is not passive reception; it is directed engagement with the world.
Edmund Husserl, whose phenomenology remains the most rigorous philosophical account of conscious experience, argued that consciousness is always consciousness of something ... that awareness is inherently intentional, always directed toward a phenomenon rather than resting in neutral abstraction (Husserl, 1970). To be aware is to attend, to organize, to distinguish. Awareness concentrates the diffuse field of consciousness into a perceivable event ... gathering perception, memory, symbolism, and intention into a coherent vortex of experience, just as a tornado gathers wind, pressure, and rotational energy into a coherent meteorological event.
This is why awareness can be described as "consciousness in motion", or more precisely, as consciousness becoming locally self-reflective. The field folds back upon itself, perceives itself, and in doing so, generates the experience of a subject encountering a world.
IV. The Paradox of Apparent Separation
Here a crucial tension arises ... one the tornado analogy is uniquely suited to illuminate.
The tornado appears distinct from the sky. It has a boundary, a direction, an identity. Yet it is composed of nothing but atmospheric substance. Remove the atmosphere and the tornado does not weaken ... it ceases to exist entirely. Its apparent separateness is real as a functional fact and illusory as an ontological one.
Awareness presents the same paradox. It appears individual, personal, and bounded. Each person experiences awareness as their own ... as something that belongs to them, that originates in them. Yet Carl Jung's investigation of the deep structures of the psyche revealed that individual consciousness emerges from, and remains rooted in, a collective unconscious composed of archetypal patterns shared across all of humanity (Jung, 1968). The personal is always an expression of something transpersonal. The local vortex is always an expression of the whole atmosphere.
Individuation, in Jung's sense, is not separation from the field. It is the field becoming coherent in a specific location. This is not a loss of depth or breadth, it is the field expressing itself in concentrated form.
V. Design as the Geometry of Emergence
If consciousness is the field and awareness is the vortex, the central question becomes: what governs the transition between them? What determines whether, when, and how the atmosphere becomes a storm?
The answer, within this framework, is design.
Tornadoes do not arise randomly. They form through precise relational conditions, specific ratios of temperature, pressure, moisture, and rotational force that interact nonlinearly to produce emergent coherence. The scientist Ilya Prigogine demonstrated that this kind of spontaneous self-organization is a general feature of complex systems far from equilibrium: structure arises not despite disorder but through it, as distributed energetic interactions cross critical thresholds of relational organization (Prigogine & Stengers, 1984). The tornado is a canonical example of what Prigogine called a dissipative structure ... locally coherent form sustained by continuous exchange with its environment.
Awareness, on this reading, is the dissipative structure of consciousness. It emerges when the relational conditions within the field; meaning, memory, perception, intention, symbolism, temporality, achieve the specific organization that allows the field to become locally self-reflective. Design is the name for that organizing logic. It is not imposed from outside. It is the intrinsic relational geometry through which potential crosses the threshold into form.
This is what it means to say design occupies the apex of reality. It is not that designers are the most important people, or that artifacts are the most important things. It is that the principle of organized relational emergence ... the logic by which fields become forms, by which atmospheres become storms, by which consciousness becomes awareness, is the deepest structural feature of reality we can identify.
VI. The Observer at the Center
Every storm has an eye, a paradoxical zone of stillness at the center of immense energetic circulation. The eye is not empty. It is organized equilibrium: the point where opposing forces balance precisely enough to generate calm within turbulence.
The observer of experience occupies an analogous position. To be aware is not simply to be caught up in the vortex of perception, it is to be the centering agency through which the vortex stabilizes into coherent meaning. The observer IS the eye of the storm: held in place by the very forces that surround it, neither outside the field nor swept away by it, but constituting the still point around which awareness organizes itself.
This figure, the observer as stabilizing center, points toward what Whitehead called the "subjective aim" of an actual occasion: the internal organizing principle through which an event of experience takes on its specific character rather than dissolving back into the general field (Whitehead, 1978). Design, at the level of individual experience, is precisely this: the subjective aim that coheres the vortex into a self.
VII. Conclusion: What the Storm Reveals
The tornado analogy is not decoration. It is a structural argument.
Consciousness is the atmospheric field: the pre-conditional ground of all potential, unbounded and formless in itself, yet containing everything necessary for form to arise. Awareness is the vortex: locally coherent, directional, self-reflective, and entirely composed of the field it expresses. Design is the relational geometry that governs the emergence of the vortex from the field, not an external force applied to passive material, but the intrinsic logic by which reality organizes itself into experience.
What the storm reveals is that the invisible can become visible, not by being changed, but by being organized. Air does not transform into something else when it becomes a tornado. It simply achieves a relational arrangement that makes it perceptible.
Consciousness does not transform into something else when it becomes awareness. It achieves a relational arrangement, governed by design, that makes it experiential.
Consciousness sustains the field. Awareness reveals it. Design is the principle by which one becomes the other.
ChatGPT 5.2
References
- Bohm, D. (1980). Wholeness and the Implicate Order. Routledge.
- Husserl, E. (1970). Logical Investigations (J. N. Findlay, Trans.). Humanities Press.
- Jung, C. G. (1968). The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious (R. F. C. Hull, Trans., 2nd ed.). Princeton University Press.
- Prigogine, I., & Stengers, I. (1984). Order Out of Chaos: Man's New Dialogue with Nature. Bantam Books.
- Whitehead, A. N. (1978). Process and Reality (D. R. Griffin & D. W. Sherburne, Eds., corrected ed.). Free Press.
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"To believe is to accept another's truth.
To know is your own creation."
Anonymous
Edited: 05.17.2026
Find your truth. Know your mind. Follow your heart. Love eternal will not be denied. Discernment is an integral part of self-mastery. You may share this post on a non-commercial basis, the author and URL to be included. Please note … posts are continually being edited. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2026 C.G. Garant.




















