1
From: "Human Potential & Development."
Split Justification: Development fundamentally involves both our inner landscape (**Internal World**) and our interaction with everything outside us (**External World**). (Ref: Subject-Object Distinction)..
2
From: "Internal World (The Self)"
Split Justification: The Internal World involves both mental processes (**Cognitive Sphere**) and physical experiences (**Somatic Sphere**). (Ref: Mind-Body Distinction)
3
From: "Somatic Sphere"
Split Justification: The Somatic Sphere encompasses all physical aspects of the self. These can be fundamentally divided based on whether they are directly accessible to conscious awareness and subjective experience (e.g., pain, touch, proprioception) or whether they operate autonomously and beneath the threshold of conscious perception (e.g., heart rate, digestion, cellular metabolism). Every bodily sensation, state, or process falls into one of these two categories, making them mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive.
4
From: "Conscious Somatic Experience"
Split Justification: Conscious somatic experiences can be fundamentally divided based on whether their primary focus is on the body's internal condition, physiological state, or spatial configuration (e.g., hunger, proprioception, pain from an organ, fatigue) or whether they are primarily concerned with the body's interaction, contact, or perception of stimuli from the external environment (e.g., touch, temperature, pressure, pain from an external source). These two categories are mutually exclusive as an experience's primary referent is either internal or external to the body's boundary, and comprehensively exhaustive as all conscious somatic experiences fall into one of these two fundamental domains.
5
From: "Awareness of Internal Bodily States"
Split Justification: All conscious awareness of internal bodily states can be fundamentally categorized as either perceptions related to the body's internal homeostatic balance, health, and drives (e.g., hunger, thirst, pain from organs, fatigue) or perceptions related to the body's physical configuration, posture, and locomotion in space (e.g., proprioception, kinesthesia, balance). These two categories are distinct in their primary sensory input and functional purpose, making them mutually exclusive and comprehensively exhaustive for internal bodily awareness.
6
From: "Awareness of Body Position and Movement"
Split Justification: All conscious awareness of the body's configuration in space can be fundamentally divided based on whether the perception is of the body's static spatial arrangement at a given moment (e.g., the angle of a joint, the orientation of a limb) or of the dynamic change in that arrangement over time (e.g., the sensation of a limb swinging, the perceived speed of a motion, the effort expended in an action). These two categories are mutually exclusive as awareness focuses either on a state or a process, and comprehensively exhaustive as any conscious experience of the body in space is either about its position or its movement.
7
From: "Awareness of Body Movement"
Split Justification: ** All conscious awareness of body movement can be fundamentally categorized as either the perception of the spatial and temporal characteristics of the body's motion (e.g., perceived speed, direction, amplitude, trajectory) or the perception of the internal energetic expenditure and forces involved in generating or resisting that motion (e.g., perceived effort, exertion, resistance). These two categories represent distinct and fundamental perceptual dimensions of movement, making them mutually exclusive, and comprehensively exhaustive as any conscious experience of movement will fall into one or both of these domains.
8
From: "Awareness of Movement's Spatial-Temporal Properties"
Split Justification: All conscious awareness of movement's spatial-temporal properties can be fundamentally divided based on whether the perception primarily relates to the body's configuration and displacement in space (e.g., direction, amplitude, trajectory, path) or its progression and timing through time (e.g., speed, duration, rhythm, acceleration). These two dimensions are distinct and mutually exclusive in their fundamental nature (space vs. time) and comprehensively cover all aspects of movement's spatial-temporal properties.
9
From: "Awareness of Movement's Spatial Properties"
Split Justification: ** All conscious awareness of movement's spatial properties can be fundamentally divided based on whether the perception primarily relates to the body's heading, orientation, or angular displacement in space (i.e., 'where' it is moving) or its overall size, range, and the path it traces (i.e., 'how much' or 'what shape' it is moving). These two dimensions are distinct and mutually exclusive in their fundamental nature (vectorial direction and attitude vs. scalar magnitude and path trace) and comprehensively cover all aspects of movement's spatial properties.
10
From: "Awareness of Movement's Magnitude and Trajectory"
Split Justification: All conscious awareness of movement's magnitude and trajectory can be fundamentally divided based on whether the perception primarily relates to the overall scale, reach, or displacement of the movement (i.e., 'how much' or 'how far' the body or limb moved) or whether it relates to the specific spatial pattern, shape, or curve traced by the body or limb during the movement (i.e., 'what path' or 'what form' the movement took). These two dimensions are distinct and mutually exclusive, as one describes the quantifiable size of the movement and the other its qualitative spatial configuration, and together they comprehensively cover all aspects of movement's magnitude and trajectory.
11
From: "Awareness of Movement Path"
Split Justification: All conscious awareness of a movement's path (i.e., its specific spatial pattern, shape, or curve traced) can be fundamentally divided based on whether the perception primarily relates to the body's overall, overarching shape or classification of the path (e.g., perceiving it as a circle, a straight line, a zig-zag pattern) or whether it relates to the fine-grained, instantaneous qualities of how that path is executed, focusing on its smoothness, jerkiness, fluidity, or the continuity of its transitions (e.g., perceiving a smooth curve vs. a series of sharp, discontinuous segments). These two categories are mutually exclusive as one focuses on the macro-configuration and the other on the micro-qualities of the trace, and comprehensively exhaustive as any conscious experience of a movement path involves both its general form and the nature of its unfolding.
12
From: "Awareness of Path's Overall Form"
Split Justification: All conscious awareness of a movement's overall path form can be fundamentally divided based on whether the perceived path returns to its starting point, forming a continuous loop or enclosing an area (closed form), or whether it has distinct start and end points that do not coincide (open form). These two categories are mutually exclusive as a path's overall form is either closed or open, and comprehensively exhaustive as all path forms topologically fall into one of these two fundamental types.
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Topic: "Awareness of Open Path Forms" (W6961)