Searching...
Showing 1-9
Passages similar to: Corpus Hermeticum — 12. About The Common Mind
Source passage
Hermetic
Corpus Hermeticum
12. About The Common Mind (16)
How then, O son, could there be in the God, the image of the Father, in the plenitude of Life - dead things? For that death is corruption, and corruption destruction. How then could any part of that which knoweth no corruption be corrupted, or any whit of him the God destroyed? Tat: Do they not, then, my father, die - the lives in it, that are its parts? Hermes: Hush, son! - led into error by the term in use for what takes place. They do not die, my son, but are dissolved as compound bodies. Now dissolution is not death, but dissolution of a compound; it is dissolved not so that it may be destroyed, but that it may become renewed. For what is the activity of life? Is it not motion? What then in Cosmos is there that hath no motion? Naught is there, son!
Christian Mysticism
Chapter XIII: Valentinian's Vagaries About the Abolition of Death Refuted. (3)
What is, then, the cause of the image? The majesty of the face, which exhibits the figure to the painter, to be honoured by his name; for the form is ...
Loading concepts...
Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Life and Teachings of Thoth Hermes Trismegistus (39)
Then Hermes asked how the righteous and wise pass to God, to which Poimandres replied: "That which the Word of God said, say I: 'Because the Father...
Loading concepts...
Neoplatonic
On the Intellectual Beauty (12)
We have told how this vision is to be procured, whether by the mode of separation or in identity: now, seen in either way, what does it give to...
Loading concepts...
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...
Loading concepts...
Western Esoteric
Paradiso: Canto XIII (3)
Now ope thine eyes to what I answer thee, And thou shalt see thy creed and my discourse Fit in the truth as centre in a circle. That which can die,...
Loading concepts...
Hermetic
Section XXI (1)
For ’tis impossible that any of the things that are should be unfruitful. For if fecundity should be removed from all the things that are, it could no...
Loading concepts...
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...
Loading concepts...
Hermetic
Section XX (1)
For God’s the Father or the Lord of all, or whatsoever else may be the name by which He’s named more holily and piously by men,—which should be set ap...
Loading concepts...
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...
Loading concepts...