About

Cellular Cosmology is a research and education platform dedicated to exploring the concentric cosmological model — the idea that the universe is structured as a self-contained cell with a luminous centre, an inhabited inner surface, and a fractal hierarchy of nested worlds.

This model draws on converging evidence from ancient cosmologies (Vedic, Platonic, Norse, Kabbalistic, Islamic), aether physics (electromagnetic wave propagation, aether theory, Le Sage gravitation), and epistemological critique (Popper, Kuhn).

About the Author

In his youth (late 1970s), Philip Mikas spent time in India, where he witnessed paranormal phenomena and the Vedic teaching of Sanatana Dharma, embodied by Sri Sathya Sai Baba. Over the years he developed a timeless, all-encompassing view of human history and the meaning of existence. When, in 1995, he encountered Cellular Cosmology through Rolf Keppler, his conceptual unification of religion, mysticism and science began. Further milestones were the works of Arthur Young (The Reflexive Universe) and his student Stan Tenen († January 30, 2022, Meru Foundation), which articulate the torus as the immanent, central form of all things. His decades of research and contemplation on the structure of reality and the meaning of life culminated in a simple geometric relationship between "point and sphere" — and in the principle of "unity in diversity" (also called love).

His central thesis: Worldview = Self-image = Image of God — how we understand the structure of the cosmos directly shapes our understanding of ourselves and our relationship to the divine.

The Compendium

The heart of this platform is a nine-chapter compendium that systematically explores the Cellular Cosmology from its historical roots through physical evidence to its philosophical and spiritual implications.

The content is drawn from over a decade of research, weaving together the wisdom of Vedic, Platonic, Norse, and Abrahamic traditions with critical engagement with aether physics.

Contact

For inquiries, collaboration, or discussion, reach Philip Mikas at:
[email protected]