Having surveyed the historical sweep, structural anatomy, and contemporary stakes of symbolic cosmoses, we arrive at a reframing: cosmos as the unfolding of relational possibility.
In this view, worlds are not pre-given containers, absolute laws, or divine decrees. They are actualised patterns within a field of potential. Meaning arises in the interplay of axes, horizons, orders, multiplicities, and boundaries — stabilised relationally, enacted perspectivally, and experienced collectively.
This relational cosmos honours contingency, multiplicity, and reflexivity. It recognises that sacred and profane, unity and diversity, stability and change are co-actualised in each symbolic act. Digital, mythic, theological, and scientific worlds are not exceptions; they are instances of relational actualisation within an ongoing cosmos.
To inhabit a relational cosmos is to participate consciously in the weaving of worlds. It is to engage in meaning-making as an active, situated, and co-creative process — a process that continually opens new possibilities while stabilising existing structures.
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