11.11.2011 This excerpt from The Divine Invasion is the paragraph that contains two of the three uses of the word phylogon.
"That which was below, his own brain, the microcosm, 
had become the macrocosm, and, inside him as microcosm 
now, he contained the macrocosm, which is to say, what 
is above."

"I now occupy the entire universe, Emmanuel realized; 
I am now everywhere equally. Therefore I have become 
Adam Kadmon, the First Man. Motion along the three 
spacial axes was impossible for him because he was 
already wherever he wished to go. The only motion 
possible for him or for changing reality lay along 
the temporal axis; he sat contemplating the world 
of the phylogons, billions of them in process, 
continually growing and completing themselves, driven 
by the dialectic that underlay all transformation. 
It pleased him; the sight of the interconnected 
network of  phylogons  was beautiful to behold. 
This was the kosmos of Pythagorias, the harmonious 
fitting-together of all things, each in its right way 
and each imperishable." 
How does a phylogon complete its growth? By traversing the present? Looking along the timeline, does the future's opposition to the past get resolved as this moment?

By meditating, Emmanuel brings the universe into himself or maybe expands his mind to contain the whole universe. When iteratively creating and testing your own phylogons, especially during the rapid movement between being inside a reality and observing it's frame, you may experience similar feelings of omniscience.
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