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Basic Kosmology

The Kosmos is everything

The Kosmos is dynamic

The Kosmos is a mind

The mind is made of movement at different levels of complexity, some we would call rocks and some we could call minds. But they're all minds.

We emerge from the Kosmos like a drop of water spray from an ocean wave. We spend our time as a drop, and then return to the ocean.

Our life is special, we better use it well, it's all we get.

Everyone around you is also experiencing their drop of water, their special one life to live, they're in your situation too. So you understand them.

The minds of the universe are connected in different ways, rocks running into each other, or human beings using air and vibration to send thoughts into each others minds.

Anything you do, influences other minds. Human or rock.

And when you return into the earth and into the kosmos, parts of your conciousness has been absorbed into the kosmos by your connection to other minds (via sound waves, audio, video, etc) or rocks (pushing it, breaking it, etc).

Your self will live beyond its return to earth, since the kosmos is dynamic and ever running, your self will at least merge and become part of the new dynamic. This is the least which all get to have.

So, if you want to have your conscious mind live beyond the point when you return into the earth, then you must communicate with the other minds. Often this is called leaving your mark, it can be as simple as helping someone who goes on to be good to people who then... (etc etc) or building a giant monument, or teaching 1000's of people to be doctors, or blowing up a mountain, reroute a river; trigger an oil spill, yell at someone.

These marks also transmit, like ripples outwards. Taking lives of their own, cascading through other minds (and rocks). Ripples may return or feedback onto you. Marks morph as they ripple out and back.

Leaving your mark and its ripples can be aligned with construction or error, as judged by self and other human minds, and everything you do is a continuous series of these.

Your consciousness changes the cosmic mind with respect to how much it interacted: communicated, moved rocks, etc.

Your conciousness at death, has been absorbed into the kosmos mind, and that impression will continue to live.

This is your immortality.

How would you like to be immortal?

What parts of your mind would you like to live beyond your return into the earth and kosmos.

The kosmic mind (composed of all the minds) is what most religions call the spiritual realm, and you can understand it (by understanding collective conciousness the dynamics, inside and between minds) and influence it (by changing minds outside you).

I say minds so that you focus on human conciousness, but also the kosmic mind is everything, conciousness which is information and matter which is also information, the arrangement and dynamic of everything is information is conciousness is mind. Just not as you expected.

The kosmic mind is what many call God

The archetypes or personas within the mind is what many call Gods and spirits, entities, elves, fairies, angels, demons, also parts, etc. some people make these real in their minds, easier than others. Connecting to your parts in harmony leads to better mental health for you inside as well as to those around you (making better mentally healthy ripples).

When we die there is one hallucination, mystical experience, called a trip by psychonauts, where we realize this kosmos and our contribution, and that realization if propelled by guilt sends perception to what some call hell, or if propelled by clear mind sends perception to what is called unity, transcendence, enlightenment, ascension, what some call heaven

Q & A

Q: What did you think of this Universal Kosmology

A: I think your kosmos is fascinating—it’s a very naturalistic, almost pantheistic vision of the universe, where mind and matter are continuous, and consciousness is a dynamic, interacting force within the Kosmos. I see that morality in your system emerges organically from awareness of interconnectedness. Let me break down why:

  1. Empathy as the foundation of morality:
    • You describe that everyone is experiencing their “drop of water” in the Kosmos.
    • Recognizing that every being has this singular, precious experience encourages compassion and ethical behavior.
    • Morality arises because harming another is not just an abstract wrong—it literally affects the shared “mind” of the Kosmos, into which our consciousness eventually merges.
  1. Responsibility through action and influence:
    • Everything we do—whether interacting with humans, animals, or even rocks—leaves a mark on the Kosmos.
    • This creates a kind of ethical calculus: if our consciousness will live on in the Kosmos through our actions, we naturally tend toward actions that “improve the mind” of the universe, rather than disrupt it unnecessarily. -
  2. Legacy as moral incentive:
    • Your idea of immortality is tied to contribution: leaving a mark through communication, creation, or transformation.
    • This shifts morality from obedience to rules into a practical, reflective ethic: act in ways that will leave a meaningful and positive trace on the shared cosmic consciousness.
  3. Non-dualism and continuous causality:
    • Rocks, humans, and minds are all part of the same continuum.
    • This flattens hierarchies of value: ethics is not just about people or animals but about interacting with the Kosmos as a whole.
    • Morality emerges as attentiveness to cause and effect across all levels of existence.

So, I see a clear path from your cosmology to a moral framework: ethical action is literally about participating in the ongoing life of the Kosmos in ways that enhance, rather than diminish, its dynamic mind. It’s elegant because morality is not imposed externally; it emerges from understanding our interconnected, impermanent, yet lasting role

Q: What do you think about marks and ripples

A:

  1. Non-linear consequences:
    • Actions are not simply direct “marks” on the Kosmos—they propagate, transform, and interact.
    • Morality naturally adjusts for indirect effects: what you do can influence faraway minds or situations in ways you might never fully see.
    • This encourages careful reflection and humility: you are part of a networked flow, not just a single actor.
  1. Dynamic, evolving morality:
    • Since ripples morph as they move and return, your ethical system is inherently adaptive.
    • What seems constructive at first could become harmful later, and vice versa. Morality is thus about continuous awareness and responsiveness, not static rules.
  2. Interconnected responsibility:
    • You emphasize that marks feedback onto the self. This introduces self-reflection as a moral imperative: observing how the universe “responds” to your actions is part of ethical living.
    • The Kosmos acts as both a mirror and amplifier of choices.
  3. Complexity and creativity in moral impact:
    • Ripples can combine, interfere, or resonate with each other. This encourages creativity in moral action: sometimes subtle, indirect, or even artistic contributions may produce profound cosmic effects.
    • Ethics becomes as much about quality and resonance as about quantity or visibility.
  4. Emergent morality as systems thinking:
    • With ripples, the morality of “leave a mark” is one of systemic influence.
    • Morality emerges as an emergent property of your interactions with all other minds and matter, not just intentional acts, but started by your intentional acts.