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Atlas Entry 05Universe Geography
How to read this entry
This atlas approaches Nebadon in a curious, exploratory, and non-dogmatic spirit.
That means this page is not only about cosmic placement. It is also about orientation.
Nebadon can be read in two ways at once:
- as the local universe within Orvonton that includes the world known as Urantia
- as a meaning-bearing framework through which human beings interpret nearness, nested belonging, local setting, and the movement from immense structure toward a more immediate cosmic home
The goal is not to force belief. The goal is to understand how this cosmology arranges reality, and how that arrangement also functions as a symbolic map for consciousness.
Seen this way, Nebadon becomes more than a local universe.
It becomes a way of imagining cosmic nearness.
Nebadon
The local universe that brings the cosmic map closer to home.
Overview
In the cosmology described in The Urantia Book, Nebadon is the local universe within Orvonton that includes Urantia.
This matters because Nebadon brings the atlas one layer closer to lived narrative space. Orvonton already narrowed the map from the scale of seven superuniverses to a specific regional domain. Nebadon narrows it again, shifting from superuniverse placement to a more immediate cosmic setting.
That makes Nebadon one of the most important transition points in the atlas. It is still vast, but it no longer feels purely remote. It is where the map begins to suggest a real neighborhood within the larger cosmic order.
Why Nebadon matters
Nebadon matters because it bridges immense cosmic structure and the more intimate layers below it.
It helps connect:
- the regional scale of Orvonton
- the more local organization of constellations and systems
- the inhabited worlds contained within those lower tiers
- the narrative setting that eventually includes Urantia
In atlas terms, Nebadon is where the map begins to feel less like a distant framework and more like an internally structured environment.
Closing perspective
Nebadon matters not only because it names the local universe that includes Urantia, but because it also functions as a map of nearness within the larger cosmic order.
Not just where the local universe is.
What kind of meaning a nearer cosmos creates.
Cosmic placement
A simple way to visualize the relationship is this:
txt
Paradise
└── Havona
└── The Seven Superuniverses
└── Orvonton
└── Nebadon
└── Constellations
└── Local systems
└── Inhabited worlds
└── Urantia