There is a question that the world’s philosophies have revisited in different forms for millennia: how do unity and multiplicity coexist?
The Laboratory does not approach this question as a thesis to defend, but as a field of observation. In certain states of expanded attention, it becomes possible to perceive simultaneously the singularity of each thing and its belonging to a common fabric. This perception is not the result of reasoning; it appears as experiential data, descriptive and reproducible.
What appears is not the erasure of individuality — on the contrary, it becomes more precise. But this individuality presents itself as a variation of a vaster reality, rather than as an entity closed upon itself.
This observation echoes intuitions long formulated by contemplative traditions as well as by thinkers of complexity. The Laboratory takes no sides between these readings: it documents an experience.

