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.
Some events and experiences appear to occur in an immeasurable (imaginative) moment considered at times to be timeless, ex. a dream state. Every event and experience surrounding these changing circumstances is responding to the context/environment currently being experienced. The result, a joining and separation of energy by means of attraction and repulsion (EIM). Certain dimensional circumstances can appear chaotic (QFVPP) while similarly creating a degree of stratification in observation (ex. light).
An Opinion:
The concept of chaos is based upon the premise that certain actions and patterns don't fit the attractions or patterns typical of an observer's particular perception (interpretation) of reality. The circumstances/situations etc. can therefore appear disorganized, unfitting and chaotic in nature. Not all patterns/pieces fit within the framework of every puzzle but rather may fit perfectly within the parameters of another - known, unknown, dimensional or non-dimensional.
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On Perception, Energy, and the Structuring of Experience: A Theoretical Inquiry Through the Lenses of Design, Psychology, and Chaos Theory
Abstract:
This essay explores the fluid interplay between perceptual boundaries, energetic dynamics, and the apparent organization (or disorganization) of experience. Drawing from quantum-level metaphors, design theory, phenomenological psychology, and principles of chaos theory and reflecting on how experiences are formed, stratified, and interpreted within constantly shifting contexts.
1. Indeterminacy and Energetic Membranes
Nothing within experiential or material reality can be deemed definitive. In quantum and phenomenological terms, every perceived “source” or fixed point—whether conceptual, sensory, or agentive—is always surrounded by an indeterminate boundary. This boundary may be conceptualized as a membrane of fluctuating energy, neither entirely internal nor external, but operating as a dynamic threshold between perceived constancy and the surrounding field of influence.
In design theory, this boundary could be likened to the liminal zone, a transitional space that holds the potential for both coherence and transformation. It is not merely a barrier but a negotiated interface—shaped by the interplay between system (form) and context (field), a recurring motif in ecological and systemic design models.
From a psychological standpoint, this membrane corresponds with the threshold of awareness—where sensory stimuli and internal cognition converge, creating the subjective sense of “insideness” and “outsideness.” This delineation is not static; rather, it emerges from energetic dynamics such as attention, memory, emotion, and expectation.
2. Temporal Elasticity and Imaginative States
Certain experiences seem to arise within a nonlinear temporality—what may be described as a temporal lacuna or imaginative aperture. These states, such as dreaming or intense reverie, defy conventional metrics of time and instead function through psychological time, as understood in depth psychology and phenomenological studies.
This suspension or elasticity of time reflects what design theorists might call experiential temporality—the way users or observers construct time subjectively through interaction, rhythm, and affect. In such cases, the perception of duration is less about clocks and more about patterns of emotional and cognitive resonance.
These temporal distortions mirror strange attractors in chaos theory: highly sensitive points within a system that produce unpredictable yet structured behavior. Experiences occurring “outside of time” may therefore represent chaotic attractors that resist linear sequencing but reveal emergent meaning across multiple scales of perception.
3. Energy in Motion (EIM) and Contextual Dynamics
Every event or phenomenon is not static but rather a product of energy in motion (EIM), continually interacting with its surrounding environment. These energetic flows—expressed through attraction, repulsion, and feedback loops—generate perceptual phenomena such as boundary formation, pattern recognition, and systemic differentiation.
In design theory, this dynamic parallels relational design thinking, where form arises not in isolation but in responsive dialogue with context. Similarly, in ecological psychology, affordances emerge not from the object itself but from the object's relation to the perceiver's capabilities and intentions.
The continual interplay between energetic convergence and divergence creates temporary zones of coherence, even as the system remains in flux. Thus, what is perceived as a discrete event is actually a node within a field of ongoing transformations.
4. Stratification, Observation, and Apparent Chaos
Some dimensions of experience may appear chaotic due to their resistance to the organizing structures familiar to the observer. This is not necessarily indicative of disorder per se, but rather of a misalignment between systemic logic and perceptual framework. In other words, chaos is often epistemological, not ontological.
From the perspective of chaos theory, systems exhibit complexity not because they lack order but because their underlying order operates at a scale or pattern beyond immediate recognition. These systems may produce what seem like random outputs (e.g., flickering light, turbulent motion), which are in fact the emergent result of nonlinear interactions within the system.
Stratification in observation—such as varying perceptions of light—may thus result from layered perceptual schemas, each attuned to different frequencies or scales of organization. In design, this is echoed in multi-level systems thinking, where solutions and problems must be situated across nested hierarchies of concern.
5. On Chaos, Perception, and Meaning
Chaos, in this framing, is not the absence of structure but the presence of unfamiliar structure. The psychological response to chaotic stimuli is often one of dissonance or cognitive overload, as the mind attempts to reconcile new inputs with existing schemas. This is consistent with theories of perceptual incongruence in cognitive psychology, where stimuli that do not conform to expectation are either reinterpreted, rejected, or integrated through creative restructuring.
Design theory often embraces such moments of incongruence as sites of innovation, where the failure of existing frameworks invites reimagination. What appears disordered in one system or context may, in another, represent high-order alignment—a coherence that becomes visible only within its appropriate dimensional or experiential frame.
Thus, the perception of chaos is deeply tied to the observer’s positionality, cognitive schema, and the dimensional framework from which observation occurs. The statement “not all patterns fit every puzzle” underscores a fundamental insight: reality is multivalent, and the fit of form to meaning depends on the lens through which it is viewed.
Conclusion
This inquiry proposes that what is often regarded as chaotic, disordered, or unfitting may instead be evidence of latent patterns operating outside familiar scales of perception. By integrating insights from design theory, psychology, and chaos theory, we can begin to approach these phenomena not as failures of understanding but as invitations toward deeper, multi-dimensional interpretation.
The boundary between form and formlessness, perception and imagination, coherence and entropy is not a line but a membrane of transformation—a dynamic space where meaning is always emergent, never final.
References
Bohm, D. (1980). Wholeness and the implicate order. Routledge.
Capra, F. (1996). The web of life: A new scientific understanding of living systems. Anchor Books.
Gleick, J. (1987). Chaos: Making a new science. Viking Penguin.
Ingold, T. (2013). Making: Anthropology, archaeology, art and architecture. Routledge.
Keller, C. (2003). The face of the deep: A theology of becoming. Routledge.
Kegan, R. (1982). The evolving self: Problem and process in human development. Harvard University Press.
Lakoff, G., & Johnson, M. (1999). Philosophy in the flesh: The embodied mind and its challenge to Western thought. Basic Books.
Merleau-Ponty, M. (1962). Phenomenology of perception (C. Smith, Trans.). Routledge & Kegan Paul. (Original work published 1945)
Norman, D. A. (2013). The design of everyday things: Revised and expanded edition. Basic Books.
Prigogine, I., & Stengers, I. (1984). Order out of chaos: Man’s new dialogue with nature. Bantam Books.
Simondon, G. (2020). Individuation in light of notions of form and information (T. Adkins, Trans.). University of Minnesota Press. (Original work published 1958)
Varela, F. J., Thompson, E., & Rosch, E. (1991). The embodied mind: Cognitive science and human experience. MIT Press.
The author generated this text in part with GPT-3, OpenAI’s large-scale language-generation model. Upon generating draft language, the author reviewed, edited, and revised the language to their own liking and takes ultimate responsibility for the content of this publication.
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"To believe is to accept another's truth.
To know is your own creation.
Anonymous
Edited: 07.10.2025
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 © 2025 C.G. Garant.
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