The Boundary Framework™ provides the structural criteria that distinguish symbolic content, subjective impressions, and impressions that require independent verification. This framework ensures that Spirit ID maintains conceptual clarity by separating symbolic depth material from structured signals.
The framework is central to the Spirit ID method, establishing the necessary distance between inner imagery, psychoid processes, and the Spirit ID Field™.
Core Distinctions
- Symbol Field — subjective, imaginal, or archetypal impressions.
- Psychoid Field — boundary‑level activity between psyche and structure.
- Spirit ID Field — impressions requiring independent verification.
Symbol Field
The Symbol Field contains subjective, imaginal, or archetypal impressions. Material at this level expresses inner psychological dynamics, including symbolic resonance, dream imagery, and intuitive associations. These impressions may be meaningful but do not imply external communication and cannot be used for verification within the Spirit ID method.
Psychoid Field
The Psychoid Field represents boundary‑level activity where psychological meaning and structural patterns appear loosely correlated. Following Jung’s concept of the psychoid, this domain reflects threshold phenomena that are neither fully mental nor fully external. Within Spirit ID, such impressions help shape hypotheses but remain pre‑evidential and cannot stand as structured signals on their own.
Spirit ID Field™
The Spirit ID Field™ is the evidential domain requiring independent external verification. An impression reaches this level only when a PK‑supported inner signal aligns with a real‑world development in a way that rules out subjective interpretation. This field forms the methodological core of the Spirit ID system, distinguishing validated communication from symbolic or psychoid material.