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Passages similar to: Corpus Hermeticum — 11. Mind Unto Hermes
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Hermetic
Corpus Hermeticum
11. Mind Unto Hermes (10)
But thus conceive it, then; that every living body doth consist of soul and matter, whether [that body be] of an immortal, or a mortal, or an irrational [life]. For that all living bodies are ensouled; whereas, upon the other hand, those that live not, are matter by itself. And, in like fashion, Soul when in its self is, after its own maker, cause of life; but the cause of all life is He who makes the things that cannot die. Hermes: How, then, is it that, first, lives subject to death are other than the deathless ones? And, next, how is it that Life which knows no death, and maketh deathlessness, doth not make animals immortal?
Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (2)
If material, then definitely it must fall apart; for every material entity, at least, is something put together. If it is not material but belongs to ...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (11)
This is at any rate a life not imported from without, not present in the mode of the heat in fire- for if heat is characteristic of the fire proper, i...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (3)
Anyone who rejects this view, and holds that either atoms or some entities void of part coming together produce soul, is refuted by the very unity of...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (1)
Whether every human being is immortal or we are wholly destroyed, or whether something of us passes over to dissolution and destruction, while...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (12)
(17) A further consideration is that if every soul is to be held dissoluble the universe must long since have ceased to be: if it is pretended that...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
On Divine Names, Caput VI (2)
And to the supercelestial lives It gives the immaterial and godlike, and unchangeable immortality; and the unswerving and undeviating perpetual moveme...
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Neoplatonic
I, Chapter X (3)
For these reasons are forms , and being simple and uniform, they receive no perturbation in themselves, and no departure from their proper mode of sub...
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Neoplatonic
On the Kosmos or on the Heavenly System (5)
The reason is given by Plato: the celestial order is from God, the living things of earth from the gods sprung from God; and it is law that the offspr...
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Christian Mysticism
The Works of Dionysius the Areopagite
On Divine Names, Caput VI (1)
Now let us sing the Eternal Life, from which comes the self-existing Life, and every life; and from which, to all things however partaking of life,...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (8)
A. There are those who insist on the activities observed in bodies- warming, chilling, thrusting, pressing- and class soul with body, as it were to...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (4)
Our opponents themselves are driven by stress of fact to admit the necessity of a prior to body, a higher thing, some phase or form of soul; their...
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Christian Mysticism
The Three Principles of the Divine Essence
Chapter 14: Of the Birth and Propagation of Man. The very Secret Gate. (14)
For when we search [into] the Beginning and Kindling of Life, we find strongly with clear Evidences all Manner of [Faculties or] Members; so that when...
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Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (2) (29)
For a brief space there is; and, precisely, it begins to fade away immediately upon the withdrawal of the other, as in the case of warmed objects when...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (5)
Again, there is movement: all bodily movement is uniform; failing an incorporeal soul, how account for diversity of movement? Predilections, reasons,...
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Neoplatonic
The Three Initial Hypostases (2)
Let every soul recall, then, at the outset the truth that soul is the author of all living things, that it has breathed the life into them all,...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (14)
And if there is in the animal world any other phase of soul, its only possible origin, since it is the life-giver, is, still, that one principle of li...
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Neoplatonic
How the Multiplicity of the Ideal-forms Came Into Being: and Upon the Good (11)
The very heavens, patently multiple, cannot be thought to disdain any form of life since this universe holds everything. Now how do these things come...
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Neoplatonic
Problems of the Soul (1) (9)
The entry of soul into body takes place under two forms. Firstly, there is the entry- metensomatosis- of a soul present in body by change from one fra...
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Hermetic
Section II (1)
[Trismegistus] The soul of every man, O [my] Asclepius, is deathless; yet not all in like fashion, but some in one way or [one] time, some in...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (9)
(14) Over against that body, stands the principle which is self-caused, which is all that neither enters into being nor passes away, the principle...
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