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Passages similar to: Allogenes the Stranger — Without Mind, Life, or Existence
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Allogenes the Stranger
Without Mind, Life, or Existence (5)
Therefore, he requires neither Mind nor Life nor indeed anything at all.
Bhagavad Gita
Karma Yoga (3.18)
He does not depend upon any being for any object.
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter IX: The Gnostic Free of All Perturbations of the Soul. (3)
Nor is he angry; for there is nothing to move him to anger, seeing he ever loves God, and is entirely turned towards Him alone, and therefore hates no...
Life of Pythagoras
SELECT SENTENCES OF SEXTUS THE PYTHAGOREAN. (6)
God, indeed, is not in want of any thing, but the wise man is in want of God alone. He, therefore, who is in want but of few things, and those...
Yoga Sutras of Patanjali
Book IV (16)
Nor do material objects depend upon a single mind, for how could they remain objective to others, if that mind ceased to think of them?
Bhagavad Gita
Sankhya Yoga (2.71)
That man who lives completely free from desires, without longing, devoid of the sense of “I” and “mine,” attains peace.
Dhammapada
Chapter VI: The Wise Man (Pandita) (84)
If, whether for his own sake, or for the sake of others, a man wishes neither for a son, nor for wealth, nor for lordship, and if he does not wish...
Corpus Hermeticum
10. The Key (24)
For oftentimes the mind doth leave the soul, and at that time the soul neither sees nor understands, but is just like a thing that hath no reason. Suc...
Chapter 3: Of the most blessed Triumphing, Holy, Holy, Holy Trinity, GOD the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, ONE only God. (26)
He is proceeded or born of nothing, but he himself is all, in eternity; and all whatsoever is, is come from his power, which from eternity goeth...
The Six Enneads
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (38)
The word "good" used of him is not a predicate asserting his possession of goodness; it conveys an identification. It is not that we think it exact to...
The Six Enneads
On True Happiness (14)
It would be absurd to think that happiness begins and ends with the living-body: happiness is the possession of the good of life: it is centred theref...
Bhagavad Gita
Jnana Yoga (4.21)
He who is free from hope, who is self-controlled, who has abandoned all possessions, though working merely with the body, does not incur sin.
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XIII: Description of the Gnostic Continued. (9)
Rightly, then, he is not disturbed by anything which happens; nor does he suspect those things, which, through divine arrangement, take place for...
Mundaka Upanishad
Second Mundaka, First Khanda (2)
That heavenly Person is without body, he is both without and within, not produced, without breath and without mind, pure, higher than the high...
The Six Enneads
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (41)
Intellection seems to have been given as an aid to the diviner but weaker beings, an eye to the blind. But the eye itself need not see Being since it...
Tripartite Tractate
The Father (5)
He is of such a kind and form and great magnitude that no one else has been with him from the beginning; nor is there a place in which he is, or from...
Bhagavad Gita
Jnana Yoga (4.22)
Content with whatsoever he gets without efforts, free from the pains of opposites, free from malice, balanced in success and failure, though acting,...
Chaldean Oracles
Cause. God. (7)
Containing all things in the one summit of his own Hyparxis, He Himself subsists wholly beyond.
Bhagavad Gita
Kṣhetra Kṣhetrajña Vibhāga Yoga (13.32)
Having no beginning and possessing no gunas, this supreme and imperishable Self, Ο son of Kunti, neither acts nor is stained by action even while...
The Six Enneads
That the Principle Transcending Being Has No Intellectual Act. What Being Has Intellection Primally and What Being Has it Secondarily (4)
Another consideration is that if The Good is simplex and without need, it can neither need the intellective act nor possess what it does not need: it...
Bhagavad Gita
Kṣhetra Kṣhetrajña Vibhāga Yoga (13.29)
Because he sees the Lord present alike everywhere, he does not injure Self by self, and thus he reaches the supreme state.
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