Abstract: This essay develops a framework for understanding psychopathology, trauma, and spiritual development within analytic idealism—an ontology assumed rather than argued here. The two-axis model (boundary permeability × integrative coherence) is presented as a phenomenological and clinical structure that can stand independently of metaphysical commitments; idealism provides an interpretive layer explaining why this structure coheres. The axes are derived as distinct control variables: permeability regulates content entering awareness (changing rapidly), while coherence regulates capacity to integrate (developing slowly). The axes are developmentally correlated under favorable conditions but dynamically dissociable, justifying the two-dimensional model. Coherence requires three capacities: stabilization, discernment, and compassion. A critical distinction separates integrable from non-integrable configurations: where coherence has collapsed, stabilization must precede integration. The essay notes convergent structural observations across traditions regarding ordinary egoic consciousness, while recognizing that different ontological frameworks yield different prognoses. For mature practitioners, both axes reach maximal development: boundaries become transparent yet fully regulated. The essay emphasizes that description is not recommendation, and includes explicit safety considerations for boundary-opening practices. Part of the Return to Consciousness research program—18 philosophical essays exploring consciousness-first metaphysics. Full project: https://brunoton.github.io/return-to-consciousness/
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Bruno Tonetto (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6980ff26c1c9540dea811e45 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18431071
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Bruno Tonetto
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