Cosmic Cycle

Cycle III in the larger-cycle framework: the cycle of the material multiverse considered as one interwoven system. It includes universes, space-time, matter, energy, and the shared rhythms by which material realities emerge, evolve, fade, and renew.

Literal meaning

The cycle of the cosmos beyond a single universe. The Universal Cycle concerns one universe; the Cosmic Cycle concerns the multiverse as a whole.

Esoteric meaning

The Cosmic Cycle teaches that material universes are not sealed islands. In the Netist view, they belong to one larger fabric, shaped by common origin, shared resonance, and the Law of Cycles. What happens in one universe may subtly matter beyond that universe because all material reality remains tied into the Net.

Allegorical meaning

A woven cloth made of many long threads. Each thread is a universe with its own color and path. The cloth is the Cosmic Cycle: not one thread, but the whole woven field of material existence.

Extended meaning

The cycle source places the Cosmic Cycle at Cycle III among the larger cycles. Cycle I is Planetary, Cycle II is Universal, Cycle III is Cosmic, Cycle IV is Chaos, and Cycle V is Primordial. The Cosmic Cycle encompasses the multiverse as a singular interwoven system. It begins from the same Cosmic seed and includes relationships among universes, their spatial dimensions, and their material forms. The source says the number of universes is beyond ordinary counting but not infinite, and that some universes may mirror our own while others may operate under different laws or constants. It also draws a sharp boundary: the Cosmic Cycle is matter-based existence. It does not include the realms of spirit, consciousness, or causality beyond physical law; those belong to the Chaos Cycle. Like all cycles, the Cosmic Cycle follows emergence, expansion, fading, and renewal.

Keep this entry focused on Cycle III. Do not fold in the full Chaos Cycle, soul-shard teaching, or unrelated multiverse speculation unless the source explicitly requires it.

Use this term when speaking about the multiverse as a material cycle. Use *Universal Cycle* for one universe and *Chaos Cycle* for the wider non-material scope.

Broad parallels include cosmologies that speak of many worlds, cosmic eggs, or repeating worlds. The Netist term should remain tied to the cycle ladder rather than treated as a borrowed idea.

Modern cosmology has speculative multiverse models, including eternal inflation and many-worlds interpretations, but none are settled proof of the Netist Cosmic Cycle. They can serve as points of comparison, not as confirmation.