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Passages similar to: Sefer Yetzirah — The Thirty-Two Paths of Wisdom
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Kabbalistic
Sefer Yetzirah
The Thirty-Two Paths of Wisdom (7)
the Occult Intelligence, because it is the Refulgent Splendor of all the Intellectual virtues which are perceived by the eyes of intellect, and by the contemplation of faith.
Neoplatonic
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...
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Neoplatonic
Ideas. (53)
Those Natures are both Intellectual and Intelligible, which, themselves possessing Intellection, are the objects of Intelligence to others.
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Hindu
Prapathaka III, Khanda 14 (2)
The intelligent, whose body is spirit, whose form is light, whose thoughts are true, whose nature is like ether (omnipresent and invisible), from...
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Neoplatonic
I, Chapter VII (2)
Farther still, to the former that which is highest and that which is incomprehensible pertain, and also that which is better than all measure, and is...
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Neoplatonic
FROM POLUS, IN HIS TREATISE ON JUSTICE. (3)
“Archytas therefore, in the beginning of his Treatise on Wisdom, exhorts to the possession of it as follows: 1. “Wisdom as much excels in all human...
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Neoplatonic
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (23)
That which soul must quest, that which sheds its light upon Intellectual-Principle, leaving its mark wherever it falls, surely we need not wonder...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XXVIII: The Fourfold Division of the Mosaic Law. (2)
Wherefore it alone conducts to the true wisdom, which is the divine power which deals with the knowledge of entities as entities, which grasps what...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter I: Introductory. (2)
Whatever the explication necessary on the point in hand shall demand, shall be embraced, and especially what is occult in the barbarian philosophy,...
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Neoplatonic
Ideas. (46)
By Intellect he containeth the Intelligibles, and introduceth Sense into the Worlds.
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Hermetic
Chapter IV: The All (15)
The answer is "LIVING MIND," as far above that which mortals know by those words, as Life and Mind are higher than mechanical forces, or...
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Western Esoteric
The Secret Doctrine of the Rosicrucians
The Eternal Parent (28)
It has been held by eminent thinkers that even the finite intelligence of man is capable of conceiving of a state of intelligence as much higher than...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XVII: Philosophy Conveys Only An Imperfect Knowledge of God. (15)
When it applies itself to first causes, it is called Understanding (nohsis). When, however, it confirms this by demonstrative reasoning, it is termed ...
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Neoplatonic
Ideas. (44-45)
For Intellect existeth not without the Intelligible; apart from it, it subsisteth not. (45) By Intellect He containeth the Intelligibles and introduce...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XXXII. (9)
But the precept which is next to this in efficacy is that which exhorts to be beyond measure studious of purifying the intellect, and by various metho...
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Neoplatonic
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (and Upon the Good:35-36)
Such in this union is the soul's temper that even the act of Intellect, once so intimately loved, she now dismisses; Intellection is movement and she...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter 62: How a man may wit when his ghostly work is beneath him or without him and when it is even with him or within him, and when it is above him and under his God (4)
Within in thyself in nature be the powers of thy soul: the which be these three principal, Memory, Reason, and Will; and secondary, Imagination and...
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book I: Instructions on the Symptoms of Death, or the First Stage of the Chikhai Bardo: The Primary Clear Light Seen at the Moment of Death (1.29)
Thine own intellect, which is now voidness, yet not to be regarded as of the voidness of nothingness, but as being the intellect itself,...
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Neoplatonic
That the Principle Transcending Being Has No Intellectual Act. What Being Has Intellection Primally and What Being Has it Secondarily (6)
If this reasoning is valid, The Good has no scope whatever for intellection which demands something attractive from outside. The Good, then, is...
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