Complete History of Netism

A Netist sacred-history text that traces the tradition's memory of creation, cycles, lost ages, Kemet, Hermetic survival, modern re-emergence, and the present turning.

Literal meaning

The full history text of Netism.

Esoteric meaning

The text presents Netism as remembrance: a modern name for an older pattern of unity, cyclic time, Ma'at, Heka, and the living Net. It treats history as waves of forgetting and remembering, where truth survives in fragments until a new age can gather them again.

Allegorical meaning

A long thread running through broken beads: the beads are eras, cultures, and symbols; the thread is the recurring memory of the Net.

Extended meaning

This entry should identify the text without overstating it. The Complete History of Netism is not a simple academic chronology. It is a sacred-history and tradition-memory document that combines cosmology, mythic memory, esoteric interpretation, comparative religion, speculative lost-age material, and more recent historical transmission. Its central claim is that the principles now called Netism have appeared across cultures and cycles under many names. Public summaries should keep a clear distinction between documented history, comparative interpretation, and internal Netist lore about Atlantis, Lemuria, ancient transmissions, and the Fifth Cycle.

Keep public wording careful. Do not present lost civilizations, timeline convergence, or ancient Netist identity as settled historical fact. The source itself notes that the name Netism is modern and used retroactively for older principles.

Use this title when referring to Netism's broad historical narrative, tradition-memory, or the study of how Netist principles are said to recur through many cultures and ages.

The text compares Netist themes with Ma'at, Tao, Brahman, Great Spirit, Hermeticism, Gnostic currents, esoteric Christianity, Sufi and Buddhist wisdom, and other expressions of unity and sacred order.

Modern comparison points in the source include systems theory, ecology, consciousness studies, meditation research, and holistic health. These should be presented as dialogue partners, not proof of the entire sacred-history narrative.