Vectorial Model of Consciousness begins with a radical premise: space is not neutral. Every environment carries a value that can amplify or diminish the force a consciousness is able to sustain. Nothing inside you has changed-and yet your power to act, endure, decide, or influence others becomes different.
From that intuition, Serge Angeloz develops an original philosophical-scientific model for readers who have long sensed that physics, philosophy of mind, and social theory each explain part of the problem of consciousness without ever fully assembling it.
In this model, every consciousness can be understood as a vector. Its direction is Intention. Its magnitude is Will. But no vector exists in isolation: each operates within an existential potential field that can strengthen or attenuate its force. When many vectors coexist, a new dynamics emerges-one that helps explain why a coordinated group of ordinary wills can overcome a stronger individual, why yielding is not always weakness, and why some leaders align others without formal authority.
At the heart of the book lies a question it refuses to close too quickly: does the field shape consciousness, or does consciousness build the field? Rather than forcing a final answer, Angeloz treats that unresolved tension as the engine of the model itself.
This is not a self-help book, and it is not a strict scientific theory. It is a rigorous, accessible philosophical essay for serious readers-for those who want conceptual depth without academic opacity.
The book also includes access to two interactive simulations: one that lets you observe how collective consciousness vectors align, cancel, and amplify one another in real time, and another that explores the internal anatomy of an individual consciousness, where fear, desire, habit, and social impulse compete under the modulation of conscious intention.
For readers interested in consciousness, emergence, leadership, context, and the hidden forces that shape human presence, Vectorial Model of Consciousness offers not a closed system, but a powerful new lens.
Related Subjects
Philosophy