Everything Is Motion
Definition
The Netist idea that apparent things are better understood as patterns of movement, rhythm, relation, and stabilized energy than as isolated static objects.
Literal meaning
Everything that appears solid is still active at some level. Form is motion held in a recognizable pattern.
Esoteric meaning
In Netist cosmology, the visible world is made of patterned activity within the Source Field. Matter, light, gravity, sound, thought, and ritual speech are treated as modes of motion, resonance, or coherence. Stillness remains important: it is the center or ground around which motion turns, not an inert absence.
Allegorical meaning
A spinning wheel that looks like a single solid circle. Its shape appears stable because the movement is ordered.
Extended meaning
The source article uses Dewey B. Larson and Walter Russell as two contrasting lenses. Larson treats motion as the basic constituent and describes space and time as reciprocal aspects of motion. Russell begins from stillness and sees motion as the wave-like appearance that arises around a deeper equilibrium. Netism can learn from both without making either thinker into final authority. The useful lesson is attention to pattern: what looks like a thing may be a relationship, a rhythm, a phase, or a temporary organization of the field.
Keep this entry as a philosophical and bridge-science lens. Do not present Larson's Reciprocal System or Russell's cosmology as accepted mainstream physics.
Usage
Use this phrase when discussing aether, Source Field, vibration, cycles, Heka, resonance, or the shift from object-thinking to pattern-thinking.
Comparative tradition
Heraclitus is often associated with the idea that all things flow. Buddhist impermanence emphasizes that conditioned things change. Hindu and Shaiva traditions sometimes speak of the cosmos as divine play or dance. Netism uses similar motion language while tying it to the Source Field and Heka.
Science correspondence
Modern physics describes matter and light through fields, waves, energy states, oscillations, and interactions. Some contemporary work explores emergent spacetime and field-first descriptions. Dewey Larson's Reciprocal System remains an independent theory outside mainstream physics.
