Horus
Definition
The Egyptian articulation of the structurally-rising son-figure who articulates renewed-consciousness after cycle-completion. Horus names the structural-figure of the Egyptian-funerary-corpus that articulates the new-cycle-emergence following the cycle-completion-and-reassembly of the prior-cycle; the broader Netist articulation reads Horus as a tradition-specific articulation of the broader Nezham (Phoenix Wings) consciousness-awakening pattern.
Literal meaning
The Egyptian articulated-figure of the rising-son. Horus articulates a specific structural-pattern preserved in the Egyptian-funerary-corpus: the figure born from the integrated-Isis after the dismembered-and-reassembled-Osiris's cycle-completion, the figure who articulates the new-cycle's emergence and the falcon-eye cosmic-perception articulation.
Esoteric meaning
Horus articulates the structural-feature that the broader contemplative-tradition has recognized as *the rising-consciousness after cycle-completion*. The structural-recognition is that the cycle-completion-and-reassembly is followed by new-cycle-emergence with renewed-consciousness; the broader Nezham (Phoenix Wings) Multiversal-Constellation articulation operates through Horus-pattern at the cross-tradition articulation.
Allegorical meaning
A new-dawn that emerges after a long-night: the dawn is structurally-distinct from the prior-day, the dawn carries renewed-articulation, and the structural-recognition is that the dawn's emergence operates through the cycle-completion of the prior-night and the broader cosmic-architecture's continuing-articulation.
Extended meaning
Horus articulates several specific structural-features: (1) The rising-narrative articulates the structural-feature of cycle-renewal-and-rising-consciousness; the broader Nezham articulation operates through Horus-pattern at the cross-tradition articulation; (2) The Eye of Horus articulation operates as cosmic-perception-feature; the broader Atūm-Re articulation operates through Eye of Horus at the Egyptian-tradition; (3) The Horus-figure operates as falcon-form articulation; the falcon's structural-features (sharp-perception, expansive-vision, structural-coherence) articulate the cosmic-perception that Horus names; (4) The Horus-pattern integrates with the broader Bridge-of-Sight (Ōmrēl) articulation; the broader cosmic-perception articulation operates through Horus-pattern at the cross-tradition layer. The relationship to *Nezham*, *Atūm-Re*, *Ōmrēl*, *Cosmic Mirror*, *Osiris*, *Isis*, and the broader cosmic-perception articulations is structural.
*Horus* articulates the Egyptian-comparative figure for cycle-renewal and rising-consciousness. The article complements *Nezham*, *Atūm-Re*, *Ōmrēl*, *Cosmic Mirror*, *Osiris*, *Isis*, and the broader cosmic-perception articulations.
Usage
A practitioner encounters Horus in the broader articulation of comparative-tradition history and in specific contexts of cycle-renewal and cosmic-perception work.
Ritual usage
Egyptian-tradition rites operate through Horus-articulation. The broader Netist articulation includes Horus-correspondence in cycle-renewal and perception ceremonies.
Comparative tradition
Egyptian articulation of *Horus* in the broader Egyptian-tradition. The Eye of Horus articulation in the funerary-corpus. The various tradition-specific articulations of rising-consciousness-figure.
