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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — The Life and Philosophy of Pythagoras
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Life and Philosophy of Pythagoras (57)
Isaac Myer has stated: "The Pythagoreans held that each star was a world having its own atmosphere, with an immense extent surrounding it, of aether." (See The Qabbalah.) The disciples of Pythagoras also highly revered the planet Venus, because it was the only planet bright enough to cast a shadow. As the morning star, Venus is visible before sunrise, and as the evening star it shines forth immediately after sunset. Because of these qualities, a number of names have been given to it by the ancients. Being visible in the sky at sunset, it was called vesper, and as it arose before the sun, it was called the false light, the star of the morning, or Lucifer, which means the light-bearer. Because of this relation to the sun, the planet was also referred to as Venus, Astarte, Aphrodite, Isis, and The Mother of the Gods. It is possible that: at some seasons of the year in certain latitudes the fact that Venus was a crescent could be detected without the aid of a telescope. This would account for the crescent which is often seen in connection with the goddesses of antiquity, the stories of which do not agree with the phases of the moon. The accurate knowledge which Pythagoras possessed concerning astronomy he undoubtedly secured in the Egyptian temples, for their priests understood the true relationship of the heavenly bodies many thousands of years before that knowledge was revealed to the uninitiated world. The fact that the knowledge he acquired in the temples enabled him to make assertions requiring two thousand years to check proves why Plato and Aristotle so highly esteemed the profundity of the ancient Mysteries. In the midst of comparative scientific ignorance, and without the aid of any modern instruments, the priest-philosophers had discovered the true fundamentals of universal dynamics.
Greek
Time and Celestial Bodies (38d)
Timaeus: The Moon He placed in the first circle around the Earth, the Sun in the second above the Earth; and the Morning Star and the Star called...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter 26: Of the Planet Saturnus (16)
Venus, that gracious, amiable and blessed planet, or the kindler of love in nature, has also its original and descent or proceeding from the...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter 26: Of the Planet Saturnus (34)
Out of this the planet Venus existed; for in the house of death Venus is an opener of meekness, or a kindler of the water, and a soft penetrator into...
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Christian Mysticism
The Three Principles of the Divine Essence
Chapter 8: Of the Creation of the Creatures, and of the Springing up of every growing Thing; as also of the Stars and Elements, and of the Original of the a Substance of this World. (23)
In such a Manner as this the Sun rose up in the Fiat, and out of the Sun (in its first Kindling) [rose] the other Planets, viz. upwards, out of the...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter V: On the Symbols of Pythagoras. (8)
Wherefore the wisest of the Egyptian priests decided that the temple of Athene should be hypaethral, just as the Hebrews constructed the temple...
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Mesoamerican
Part III, Chapter 3 (7)
Thus they spoke while they saw and invoked the coming of the sun, the arrival of day; and at the same time that they saw the rising of the sun, they...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VIII: The Use of the Symbolic Style By Poets and Philosophers. (14)
Again, that the Spring is called "flowery," from its nature; and Night "still," on account of rest; and the Moon" Gorgonian," on account of the face...
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Neoplatonic
Are the Stars Causes? (5-6)
When they tell us that a certain cold star is more benevolent to us in proportion as it is further away, they clearly make its harmful influence...
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Neoplatonic
Are the Stars Causes? (1)
That the circuit of the stars indicates definite events to come but without being the cause direct of all that happens, has been elsewhere affirmed,...
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Neoplatonic
CHAP. XV. (1)
Conceiving, however, that the first attention which should be paid to men, is that which takes place through the senses; as when some one perceives...
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