The Collaborative International Dictionary
Interiority \In*te`ri*or"i*ty\, n. State of being interior.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1701, from interior + -ity.
Wiktionary
n. The state or quality of being private or interior to the person
Wikipedia
Usage examples of "interiority".
Howard Gardner does a masterful job of summarizing development as being the two processes of decreasing egocentrism and increasing interiority.
I said that holistic systems theories leave out the interiority of the holons they describe.
Each interior development that we will be following is, of course, governed by the twenty tenets (though not by those alone), and thus each development involves a new and creative emergence, a new transcendence, a new depth, a new interiority, a new differentiation/integration, a greater degree of relative autonomy (greater capacity for both agency and for communion), a greater degree of consciousness, a greater total embracewith new fears, new anxieties, new needs, new scarcities, new desires, new moral engagements in new shared worldviews, and the ever-present possibility of new and higher pathologies and distortions.
If lower holons possess interiority, which I believe they do, and if any holon exists only in a system of relational exchange with other same-level holons, which it does, then any holon possesses a shared interiority with its peers, and that is a "world-view" or "common worldspace" in the broadest sense.