Dispersed rational sphere (from Latin - "dissipated, scattered"; and Latin - "reason") is a totality of dissipated informational fields of mass commonplace consciousness that includes different reduced and simplified results of rational (philosophical and scientific) cognition and ideas about their social, cultural, technological and technical outputs. These results and ideas exist in fragmentary forms of commonplace and self-evident knowledge and are taken for granted.
To a great extent the dispersed rational sphere contains the knowledge that used to be the highest achievements of rational inquiry (e.g. ideas of sphericity of the Earth, its orbital revolution, its place in the planetary system and Galaxy; comprehension of the fundamental laws of nature and the atomic structure of the matter; notion of the possibility of heavier-than-air vehicle flights, sound and image transmission for distance; theory of evolutional development of the human being; concepts of reflexes, the unconscious, psychological complexes; understanding of the driving forces, forms and vectors of social development, etc.).
The concept is introduced by professor Victor Ovcharenko.