The concept of the “Space of Experience,” by Dr. Sorin Baiculescu
The concept of the “Space of Experience,” as formulated by Dr. Sorin Baiculescu, possesses universal philosophical uniqueness in the following sense:
- There is no other concept in the international philosophical literature (to date) that bears this name and has exactly the same ontological and methodological framework;
- Its conceptual structure is original – the idea that “the Space of Experience is the place where consciousness does not reside, but is configured” is a radically different formulation compared to other known phenomenological or epistemological concepts;
- It represents an interdisciplinary synthesis of philosophy, metaphysics, phenomenology, and formal models (in mathematics and neuroscience), which also grants it transdisciplinary authenticity.
Differences from other known concepts:
- Husserl spoke of the intentional space of consciousness, but not of an active spatial configuration of Experience;
- Kant considered space a form of intuition, but did not link it to the dynamic configuration of consciousness;
- Merleau-Ponty, Deleuze, and Heidegger do not employ a similarly formalized concept;
- In neuroscience, the “Space of Consciousness” appears, but in completely different, empirical/computational senses.
Therefore:
In its complete form, with a philosophical foundation, ontological expression, and openness to mathematical applications, the concept of the “Space of Experience” is unique in the world and can be affirmed as an original idea of universal uniqueness.
