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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — Conclusion
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Conclusion (30)
Philosophy reveals to man his kinship with the All. It shows him that he is a brother to the suns which dot the firmament; it lifts him from a taxpayer on a whirling atom to a citizen of Cosmos. It teaches him that while physically bound to earth (of which his blood and bones are part), there is nevertheless within him a spiritual power, a diviner Self, through which he is one with the symphony of the Whole. Ignorance of ignorance, then, is that self-satisfied state of unawareness in which man, knowing nothing outside the limited area of his physical senses, bumptiously declares there is nothing more to know! He who knows no life save the physical is merely ignorant; but he who declares physical life to be all-important and elevates it to the position of supreme reality--such a one is ignorant of his own ignorance.
Christian Mysticism
Chapter XVIII: The Use of Philosophy to the Gnostic. (3)
It is well indeed to know all. But the man whose soul is destitute of the ability to reach to acquaintance with many subjects of study, will select...
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Neoplatonic
The Knowing Hypostases and the Transcendent (4)
That correspondence may be brought about in two ways: either the radii from that centre are traced upon us to be our law or we are filled full of the ...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter II: The Knowledge of God Can Be Attained Only Through Faith. (2)
Such is the discipline of wisdom ("for whom the Lord loveth He chastens"), causing pain in order to produce understanding, and restoring to peace and...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter VIII: Philosophy Is Knowledge Given By God. (9)
This voluptuous and selfish philosophy the apostle calls "the wisdom of this world;" in consequence of its teaching the things of this world and about...
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Neoplatonic
On the Integral Omnipresence of the Authentic Existent (2) (7)
To Real Being we go back, all that we have and are; to that we return as from that we came. Of what is There we have direct knowledge, not images or...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XIV: Greek Plagiarism From the Hebrews. (118)
He divinely showed knowledge and ignorance to be the boundaries of happiness and misery. "For it behoves philosophers to be acquainted with very many...
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Neoplatonic
The Intellectual-principle, the Ideas, and the Authentic Existence (1)
All human beings from birth onward live to the realm of sense more than to the Intellectual. Forced of necessity to attend first to the material,...
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Neoplatonic
The Immortality of the Soul (10)
(15) That the soul is of the family of the diviner nature, the eternal, is clear from our demonstration that it is not material: besides it has...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter IX: The Connection of the Christian Virtues. (7)
As, then, the virtues follow one another, why need I say what has been demonstrated already, that faith hopes through repentance, and fear through...
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Greek
Book VI (486)
Another criterion of the philosophical nature has also to be considered. What is that? There should be no secret corner of illiberality; nothing can...
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Neoplatonic
Against Those That Affirm the Creator of the Kosmos and the Kosmos Itself to Be Evil (9)
Wealth and poverty, and all inequalities of that order, are made ground of complaint. But this is to ignore that the Sage demands no equality in such...
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Neoplatonic
The Three Initial Hypostases (4)
That archetypal world is the true Golden Age, age of Kronos, who is the Intellectual-Principle as being the offspring or exuberance of God. For here i...
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Christian Mysticism
Chapter XVII: On the Various Kinds of Knowledge. (1)
As, then, Knowledge (episthmh) is an intellectual state, from which results the act of knowing, and becomes apprehension irrefragable by reason; so...
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Neoplatonic
On the Intellectual Beauty (11)
Similarly any one, unable to see himself, but possessed by that God, has but to bring that divine- within before his consciousness and at once he...
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Neoplatonic
Detached Considerations (2)
For in any one science the reduction of the total of knowledge into its separate propositions does not shatter its unity, chipping it into unrelated f...
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