Continuous Cosmos

The term Continuous Cosmos refers to a kind of mythological view which predominated prior to the axial age. It is a worldview which has in past times ebbed back and forth, it will come back in a sense due to the rise of Kami and Archons as a product of the resolution of the Meta-Crisis.

The term was first coined by Charles Taylor.

Gods and humans
In mythologies which posit a continuous cosmos, there are no qualitative differences between humans and the divine; gods are considered to differ from human beings simply in that they are more powerful, and are not moral exemplars. Reality is considered to be cyclical rather than historical, and ritual behaviour is intended to draw on the creative power of this cycle rather than altering it, because changing the future would mean undermining the past. In cultures operating on this mythology, wisdom is simply knowledge that enables one to “live long and prosper”.

There is a radical sense of connectedness which allows for talking animals and divine humans. These are not metaphors

Anachronism
Vervaeke notes that he considers the use of the term “cosmos” in this coinage a bit anachronistic, because the concept of the cosmos, in the sense of an ordered universe, emerged later during the axial age in the ideas of Pythagoras.