The Inhabitable Spatial World: Constitutional Design for the Age of Spatial Computing (Virtual Reality). - Tapa blanda

Ibrahim, Abdul-Rahman Adebola

 
9798180359827: The Inhabitable Spatial World: Constitutional Design for the Age of Spatial Computing (Virtual Reality).

Sinopsis

Billions spent. Hardware refined across a decade. Nobody genuinely inhabits the environments that came out the other side. If you have watched spatial computing fail repeatedly and suspected the problem runs deeper than the hardware, you are right. The path is fundamentally wrong. Not premature. Not in need of one more iteration. Wrong at its constitutional foundation, in a way that no engineering improvement on it can correct.

Every prior computing era that achieved civilisational scale, the web, mobile, the graphical interface, established a constitutional layer before commercial development built upon it. Spatial computing has no such layer. It has capital, engineering discipline, and a decade of consistent failure. The failure is architectural. The correct foundation does not yet exist inside any product, platform, or design system the industry has produced. It exists here.

What This Book Delivers

The Inhabitable Spatial World establishes the constitutional foundation spatial computing has never had and cannot succeed without:

  • Twelve original constitutional laws derived from the actual properties of human perception and cognition — not guidelines, not conventions, not best practices. Laws. A spatial environment that violates any one of them is not poorly designed. It is unconstitutionally designed.
  • Twenty-five precisely defined professional terms that give the field, for the first time, a shared vocabulary precise enough for contractual specification, legal enforceability, and rigorous research comparison.
  • A three-part AI governance architecture whose loyalties are constitutional rather than declarative — the Counsel loyal to the human by architecture, the Envoy loyal to its declared purpose by architecture, the Arbiter loyal to the twelve laws by adversarial certification.
  • An ethical rule engine that makes manipulation technically impossible rather than merely inadvisable — absent from the code paths, not blocked by policy.
  • Dream Code — the constitutional programming language in which a compliant spatial environment either compiles or does not exist.

Who This Book Is For

Spatial experience designers, XR designers, immersive environment designers, and spatial UX practitioners who need a first-principles design framework that speaks the language of the actual problem. Executives and product leaders who have commissioned spatial computing work and watched it fail, and need to understand precisely why and what correct commissioning requires. Researchers who need a rigorous, reproducible evaluation framework. Policymakers and compliance professionals who need the technical vocabulary that makes spatial computing regulation enforceable rather than aspirational.

The Window Is Finite

The infrastructure of spatial computing is accumulating now, encoding constitutional assumptions that will harden into precedent. Buy it for the spatial computing argument. Keep it because the twelve constitutional laws apply wherever designed environments and human beings meet.

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