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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — Stones, Metals and Gems
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Stones, Metals and Gems (10)
The body of every thing was likened to a rock, trued either into a cube or more ornately chiseled to form a pedestal, while the spirit of everything was likened to the elaborately carved figure surmounting it. Accordingly, altars were erected as a symbol of the lower world, and fires were kept burning upon them to represent that spiritual essence illuminating the body it surmounted. The square is actually one surface of a cube, its corresponding figure in plane geometry, and its proper philosophic symbol. Consequently, when considering the earth as an element and not as a body, the Greeks, Brahmins, and Egyptians always referred to its four corners, although they were fully aware that the planet itself was a sphere.
Christian Mysticism
Chapter XI: The Mystical Meanings in the Proportions of Numbers, Geometrical Ratios, and Music. (5)
Such, then, is the style of the example in arithmetic. And let the testimony of geometry be the tabernacle that was constructed, and the ark that was...
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Greek
The Elements (55c)
Timaeus: when joined together, formed eight solid angles, each composed of three plane right angles; and the shape of the body thus constructed was...
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Greek
The Elements (54b)
Timaeus: the equilateral triangle is constructed as a third. The reason why is a longer story; but should anyone refute us and discover that it is...
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Hindu
Prapathaka V, Khanda 6 (1)
'The altar is the earth, O Gautama; its fuel is the year itself, the smoke the ether, the light the night, the coals the quarters, the sparks the...
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Greek
The Elements (55e)
Timaeus: and the most plastic body, and of necessity the body which has the most stable bases must be pre-eminently of this character. Now of the...
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Greek
The Elements (55a)
Timaeus: meet in a point, they form one solid angle, which comes next in order to the most obtuse of the plane angles. And when four such angles are...
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Greek
The Elements (53c)
Timaeus: of each of these Kinds which I must endeavor to explain to you in an exposition of an unusual type; yet, inasmuch as you have some...
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Greek
The Elements (53d)
Timaeus: Now all triangles derive their origin from two triangles, each having one angle right and the others acute ; and the one of these triangles...
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