COSMOPHANISM: The Story of the Waking World and How the Universe Learned to Know Itself
COSMOPHANISM: The Story of the Waking World and How the Universe Learned to Know Itself Prologue: The Story We Are In Every culture has a creation story. Ours usually starts with a lonely God speaking words into a void, or a cosmic egg cracking open. But COSMOPHANISM tells a different kind of story—one that doesn’t start with a person, but with a possibility. Imagine, before time, not a darkness but a fullness. Not a who, but a could-be. The Greeks called this Chaos, but they didn’t mean disorder. They meant the raw, pregnant silence before the first note is struck—the way a seed contains a forest without yet being a tree. This is the Source: not a king on a throne, but a field of infinite might-be. It is not conscious. It does not think. It simply holds all potential, like a deep breath that has not yet been exhaled. And because it is full of possibility, it contains a subtle tension—like the moment before a seed splits open, or the spark between two eyes that have just m...