Böhme’s “Atmosphere as an Aesthetic Concept” gives atmosphere philosophical precision by defining it as the felt quality of space between subject and object, production and reception. Its iconic idea is that atmospheres are quasi-objective: they emanate from things, arrangements, materials, lights, sounds and bodies, yet their character is realised only in perception. The theoretical contribution is to transform aesthetics from a theory of artworks into a theory of environmental presence. Methodologically, Böhme analyses ordinary language, stage design, moods and spatial character to establish atmosphere as a mediating phenomenon rather than a vague metaphor. Its conceptual operation is aesthetic mediation: environments are understood as produced fields of feeling that act upon participating subjects without being reducible to private emotion. The bridge to the wider field links philosophy, architectural theory, scenography, environmental design and urban ambiances, making atmosphere a rigorous category for analysing how spaces are composed, sensed and socially inhabited.