Time Yug Model *

Daily Cycles, Consciousness & 2304-Year Civilization Framework

The Time Yug Model is a deep cyclical framework that connects daily time cycles with long-term human civilization patterns. It suggests that time is not just a measurable quantity but a living system carrying energy, rhythm, and psychological influence.

Just as a single day moves through light and darkness, civilization also evolves through repeating phases of clarity, desire, ego, conflict, and transformation.

Core Principle

Time has quality, not only quantity. Each phase of time carries different energetic properties that influence:

  • Human mood and emotional state
  • Productivity and focus
  • Spiritual awareness
  • Desire and ambition
  • Rest and recovery patterns

24-Hour Time Yug Cycle

Light Satyug
Purity, clarity, discipline
Light Treta
Growth, ambition
Light Dwapar
Competition, ego
Light Kaliyug
Stress, pressure
Dark Satyug
Peace, calm
Dark Treta
Desires, cravings
Dark Dwapar
Dreams, subconscious
Dark Kaliyug
Restlessness

2304-Year Civilizational Cycle

A full civilizational cycle spans 2304 years, divided into 4 Yugas of 576 years each.

YugaYearsNature
Satyug0–576Wisdom, harmony
Treta577–1152Expansion, desire
Dwapar1153–1728Technology, competition
Kaliyug1729–2304Conflict, instability

Why 576 Years Matters

  • Generations completely change
  • Belief systems evolve
  • Political systems rise and fall
  • Technologies transform societies
  • Cultural memory resets

Modern Civilizational Crisis

  • Environmental imbalance
  • Mental health crises
  • Hyper-materialism
  • Technological overload
  • Social division
  • Loss of deeper meaning

The Fractal Principle

  • A day has Yugas
  • A year has seasons
  • A civilization has eras
  • A human life has stages

Final Vision

Time is not just hours on a clock. It carries rhythm, pressure, and transformation. Every cycle of collapse carries the seed of renewal.

Model Interpretation Note
This website presents an overview of ongoing research. Expanded technical materials, references, and supporting analyses may be shared with qualified researchers, institutions, or collaborators upon request via email