
The Cosmic Codex
Welcome to The Cosmic Codex—a transmission from the edge of becoming.
Hosted by philosopher and Ph.D. candidate Arabella Thais, this podcast traces the golden threads that weave cosmos, mythos, and psyche into a unified vision of reality. Through visionary dialogues and solo scholarly riffs, Arabella excavates the deeper structures of existence—drawing from philosophy, cosmology, depth psychology, mathematics, poetics, and the occult.
This is a philosophy podcast for a new epoch, one that dares to ask how meaning, beauty, and consciousness are encoded into the fabric of the universe. Each episode contributes to a larger arc—unfolding themes such as retro-causality, anarchy, the Eternal Feminine, symbolic mathematics, and the aesthetics of time—as part of an urgent project: to reimagine the real and awaken a cosmology of wholeness.
The Cosmic Codex is not merely a podcast.
It is a living manuscript. A metaphysical map.
A call to remember what you came here to know.
www.arabellathais.com
The Cosmic Codex
ARCHIVE #18 — An Excerpt from Being and Becoming
(A Literary Invocation)
This episode stands apart from the others in this archive. There is no guest, no dialogue—only a reading. A transmission. A moment of quiet descent into the soul of a work-in-progress.
What you will hear is an excerpt from my book-in-the-making, Being and Becoming—a text that, in many ways, undergirds the entire philosophical architecture of this podcast. It is one of the most personal offerings I’ve made: not in content alone, but in form. To share one’s writing—one’s interior landscape shaped into language—is a kind of nakedness. But this book, this process, asks for that.
Being and Becoming is an exploration of existence itself, and of the individual’s journey through fragmentation, memory, time, and return. Though deeply rooted in my own lived experience, it seeks to speak to something universal—a thread running through all of us, guiding us toward integration, toward coherence, toward truth.
This excerpt is meant to be heard, yes—but the book is ultimately meant to be read. Reading is a sacred act. Silent. Interior. The word inside the mind carries a different frequency—it is unspoken, yet no less alive.