The Ancients Never Believed in Flat Earth — They Mapped Consciousness
- itsbenagain
- Nov 28
- 1 min read

Flat earthism is a distortion of forgotten cosmogram wisdom. The “firmament, dome, and waters” were never meant as literal structures, but symbolic models of perception and reality.
In the Egyptian cosmogram, for instance, Nut — the sky goddess — doesn’t just represent the sky, but the boundary of our sensory bubble. The dome is a metaphor, not a map. The “waters above” are the primordial field where probability and superposition give birth to observable reality.
Think of information theory: darkness beyond visible light is the macrostate (all possibilities), while the stars we see are microstates (specific outcomes).
Geb, the earth god, represents the topology of consciousness: 3D objects on a 2D plane collapsing into a sphere, expanding into higher and lower dimensions as perception deepens.
Their daughter Nepthys bridges the seen and unseen — what the Egyptians called the Duat. Today we might call it wormholes, entanglement filaments, or hidden dimensions — the connective tissue of rebirth across all scales of cosmology.



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