They said:
And from this, they imagined the greatest of all things:
They called this Vessel the Universe.
And from this image arose a question that seemed almost too obvious to ask:
Is the universe something that contains everything?
The Image of the Vessel
In the common telling, the Universe was like a great bowl without edges.
All things lay within it.
And beyond it—so the story went—there was nothing at all.
Thus, everything that existed was imagined as contained.
And containment became the most fundamental relation:
To exist was to be inside the Universe.
The Quiet Assumption
But the deeper storytellers began to notice something peculiar.
For if the Universe was a container, then it must stand apart from what it contained.
Yet when they searched for this distinction, they found nothing beyond the contents themselves.
Only relations extending, transforming, intertwining.
The Unravelling of the Container
Slowly, the image began to fail.
For if everything was inside the Universe, then what was the Universe outside of?
If it contained all things, where did it stand?
And if there was no outside, then in what sense could it be a container at all?
The notion began to fold in on itself.
What had seemed like the most obvious image—
was revealed to be a projection of smaller containers onto totality itself.
The Turning of the Tale
Then came a different telling.
Instead, it spoke of a Field.
In this telling, there were no contents placed inside a container.
What had been called “things” were not objects held within the Universe.
They were knots in the fabric of relation itself.
The Dissolution of “Inside”
In this new vision, the word “inside” lost its grip.
For there was no outside from which an inside could be defined.
Containment was no longer fundamental.
It was a metaphor borrowed from smaller domains—rooms, vessels, bodies—and mistakenly projected onto the whole.
The Universe did not contain everything.
It was not a vessel at all.
The Question That Fell Away
And so the ancient question began to dissolve.
“Is the universe something that contains everything?”
no longer described a meaningful possibility.
For it depended on a prior illusion:
Once these assumptions were withdrawn, the question no longer held together.
What Remains
In the final telling, there is no Great Vessel.
There is only a relational field—
within which all distinctions arise as patterns of stability.
The Universe is not what holds everything.
It is the condition under which “everything” can appear at all.
Closing of the Myth
So the storytellers set aside the image of the Vessel.
No longer did they imagine existence as being placed inside a grand container.
Instead, they came to see:
Only the endless articulation of relation—
because it is all holding.