In any inner observation work, sooner or later one encounters the question of the observer itself. Who observes? And can one observe this observer without producing a third gaze which, itself, will need to be observed?
This regression — the witness of the witness, the witness of the witness of the witness — is less a philosophical paradox than a functional datum. It signals something precise: the observer is not a fixed entity. It is itself a process, made of the same materials as what it observes.
The Laboratory has documented several configurations in which this regression resolves itself not by elimination but by saturation: at a certain degree of recurrence, the observer loses its own consistency and dissolves into the observed flow. This is not a failure of the method. It is a datum.
Practically, this requires reformulating the objective. Inner observation does not aim to produce a detached, stable gaze — no such gaze exists durably. It aims to create a regulated alternation between engagement and withdrawal, between participation in content and awareness of process.
Markers from session observation
- The witness emerges more easily after a moment of relaxation than after an effort of concentration.
- It fragments rapidly in the presence of intense emotion — not because the emotion destroys it, but because it merges with it.
- Its duration of maintenance is inversely proportional to the conscious effort to maintain it.
What we call the “witness” in this context is not a permanent instance. It is an ephemeral function, summonable, trainable, but not substantial. Its value lies not in its stability but in its availability.

