Searching...
Showing 1-20
Passages similar to: Stromata (Miscellanies) — Chapter XX: The True Gnostic Exercises Patience and Self - Restraint.
Source passage
Christian Mysticism
Stromata (Miscellanies)
Chapter XX: The True Gnostic Exercises Patience and Self - Restraint. (12)
But the reasoning faculty, being peculiar to the human soul, ought not to be impelled similarly with the irrational animals, but ought to discriminate appearances, and not to be carried away by them. The powers, then, of which we have spoken hold out beautiful sights, and honours, and adulteries, and pleasures, and such like alluring phantasies before facile spirits; as those who drive away cattle hold, out branches to them. Then, having beguiled those incapable of distinguishing the true from the false pleasure, and the fading and meretricious from the holy beauty, they lead them into slavery. And each deceit, by pressing constantly on the spirit, impresses its image on it; and the soul unwittingly carries about the image of the passion, which takes its rise from the bait and our consent.
Hermetic
12. About The Common Mind (4)
For [Mind] becomes co-worker with them, giving full play to the desires toward which [such souls] are borne - [desires] that from the rush of lust str...
Loading concepts...
Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
The Celestial Hierarchy, Caput II (4)
It is, then, possible to frame in one's mind good contemplations from everything, and to depict, from things material, the aforesaid dissimilar...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
III, Chapter XX (1)
Omitting, therefore, these things, we may reasonably adduce a second cause, assigned by you, of the above mentioned particulars: viz. “ that the soul...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Physiology and Human Nature (69d)
Timaeus: which has within it passions both fearful and unavoidable—firstly, pleasure, a most mighty lure to evil; next, pains, which put good to rout...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
The Impassivity of the Unembodied (2)
Let us begin with virtue and vice in the Soul. What has really occurred when, as we say, vice is present? In speaking of extirpating evil and...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
FROM THEAGES, IN HIS TREATISE ON THE VIRTUES. (2)
Since, however, of the parts of the soul, one is the leader, but the other follows, and the virtues and the vices subsist about these, and in these;...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (7)
Inferior, yes; but outside of nature, no. The thing There was in some sense horse and dog from the beginning; given the condition, it produces the hig...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book IV (439)
Clearly. Then we may fairly assume that they are two, and that they differ from one another; the one with which a man reasons, we may call the rationa...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book IX (586)
Those then who know not wisdom and virtue, and are always busy with gluttony and sensuality, go down and up again as far as the mean; and in this...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (2) (17)
Is it because in us the governing and the answering principles are many and there is no sovereign unity? That condition; and, further, the fact that o...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book X (602)
True. And the arts of measuring and numbering and weighing come to the rescue of the human understanding—there is the beauty of them—and the apparent ...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
Beauty (6)
Hence the Mysteries with good reason adumbrate the immersion of the unpurified in filth, even in the Nether-World, since the unclean loves filth for i...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
The Soul's Descent Into Body (8)
The object of the Intellectual Act comes within our ken only when it reaches downward to the level of sensation: for not all that occurs at any part o...
Loading concepts...
Western Esoteric
Purgatorio: Canto XVIII (3)
Every substantial form, that segregate From matter is, and with it is united, Specific power has in itself collected, Which without act is not...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book IX (586)
Yes, he said, the same will happen with the spirited element also. Then may we not confidently assert that the lovers of money and honour, when they s...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
FROM THEAGES, IN HIS TREATISE ON THE VIRTUES. (1)
The order of the soul subsists in such a way, that one part of it is the reasoning power, another is anger, and another is desire. And the reasoning...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
On the Integral Omnipresence of the Authentic Existent (1) (15)
It had a certain aptitude and it grasped at that to which it was apt. In its nature it was capable of soul: but what is unfitted to receive soul entir...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
CHAP. XXXI. (9)
With respect to what is called desire, these men are said to have asserted as follows: That desire indeed, itself, is a certain tendency, impulse,...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
IV, Chapter II (1)
For it happens that spirits are commanded [to do this or that] who do not use a reason of their own, and have not the principle of judgment. Nor does ...
Loading concepts...
Greek
Book IV (440)
What point? You remember that passion or spirit appeared at first sight to be a kind of desire, but now we should say quite the contrary; for in the...
Loading concepts...