PUNYCODEX

The Authentic Orthography

๐“‹๐“ƒ€๐“‚ป ๊œขb

Heart, Conscience, Emotion ยท Heart. Central to the weighing of the heart ritual. Represents conscience, emotion, moral worth

Tier 2 ๊œขb.com
๊œขb โ€” Heart, Conscience, Emotion
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The Authentic Name

Why ๊œขb.com is the correct form

Original Script

๐“‹๐“ƒ€๐“‚ป

The name in its original Egyptian form. ๊œขb (๐“‹๐“ƒ€๐“‚ป) is attested as heart, conscience, emotion โ€” โ€œHeart. Central to the weighing of the heart ritual. Represents conscience, emotion, moral worthโ€. Its original diacritics and script distinctions carry the full phonetic and orthographic weight of the source tradition.

ASCII Constraint

ab

Reduced to plain ab, the name loses everything that made it specific: original diacritics and script distinctions. What remains is an ASCII string that machines can parse but that no longer speaks with its original voice.

Unicode Restoration

๊œขb

The Unicode restoration recovers what ASCII flattened. ๊œขb restores original diacritics and script distinctions, returning the name to its original written dignity. The domain encodes to Punycode, but the browser displays the truth.

Punycode Encoding
๊œขb.com โ†’ xn--b-xw3e.com

The non-ASCII characters in ๊œขb are encoded while the ASCII remains visible. To the DNS, it is Punycode. To humanity, it is ๊œขb.

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Original Script Provenance

How ๊œขb travels from ancient script to scholarly transliteration

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Pronunciation

How ๊œขb was spoken

/ส•aหb/ Egyptological Reconstruction
๊œข- Voiced pharyngeal fricative [ส•] or glottal catch, followed by long open [aห]; the Egyptological ayin marks the throat-sound that opens the name.
-b Voiced bilabial stop [b], closing the word like a heartbeat.
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The Weighing Heart

Conscience ยท Memory ยท Moral Witness

The Egyptian ๊œขb is far more than a physical organ. It is the seat of intelligence, memory, emotion, and moral character โ€” the only organ left inside the mummy at embalming, because it must speak for the deceased in the Hall of the Two Truths.

Seat of Intelligence

Thought, feeling, and will all arise in the heart; the ib records every deed, word, and intention.

Moral Witness

In judgment the heart is weighed against the feather of Maat; it cannot lie about a life.

Heart Scarab

Spell 30B amulets, often of green stone, prevent the heart from testifying against its owner.

Temple Offering

The heart is presented to Horus and Thoth as the core of the justified self.

Sacred Symbols

Heart scarab Green-stone amulet inscribed with Book of the Dead Spell 30B, placed over the chest
Scales of Maat The balance in the Hall of the Two Truths on which the heart is weighed
Ostrich feather The feather of Maat, the standard of truth against which the heart is measured
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Mythology

Stories of ๊œขb

The Egyptian ab โ€” usually translated as 'heart' โ€” is far more than a physical organ. It is the seat of intelligence, memory, emotion, and moral character. The ab is the only organ left inside the mummy at embalming, because it must speak for the deceased when the soul stands before the divine tribunal.

Anatomy of the Soul

The Heart in the Chest

For the Egyptians, thought, feeling, and will all occurred in the heart. The ib recorded every deed, word, and intention of a person's life. It was therefore the most truthful witness at judgment. A heart that was heavy with wrongdoing could not deceive the gods, while a heart that was 'true of voice' โ€” maat-kheru โ€” carried its owner into the blessed afterlife.

Judgment

The Weighing of the Heart

In the Hall of the Two Truths, the heart of the deceased is placed on one pan of the scales and the feather of Maat โ€” truth, justice, cosmic order โ€” on the other. If the heart balances, the soul is declared maat-kheru and passes into the Field of Reeds. If the heart is heavy with sin, it is devoured by Ammit, the 'Devourer of the Dead', and the soul ceases to exist.

Protection

The Heart's Defence

To prevent the heart from testifying against its owner, spells were inscribed on scarabs or heart amulets placed on the mummy. The most famous is Book of the Dead Spell 30B: 'O my heart... do not stand up against me as a witness, do not oppose me in the tribunal.' The prayer reveals both terror and trust: the heart knows the truth, but the gods may grant mercy to the properly prepared.

Theology

The Ib and the Gods

The heart is not only a witness but an offering. In temple ritual and in the afterlife, the ib is presented to the gods โ€” above all to Horus, who guards it, and to Thoth, who records the verdict. The heart is sometimes identified with Horus himself, the living king. Thus the ab binds individual morality, royal legitimacy, and cosmic order into a single symbol.

Go Deeper

Extended Lore

The lore you have read is the surface โ€” the living myth. Beneath it lies the scholarship: etymology, reconstructed pronunciation, Unicode character breakdown, and the cultural legacy of ๊œขb.

Enter Extended Lore
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