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Passages similar to: The Tibetan Book of the Dead — Book II: The Fourth Method of Closing the Womb-Door
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book II: The Fourth Method of Closing the Womb-Door (33.4)
'Indeed, all these are like dreams, like hallucinations, like echoes, like the cities of the Odour-eaters, like mirage, like mirrored forms, like phantasmagoria, like the moon seen in water — not real even for a moment. In truth, they are unreal; they are false.'
Gnostic
The Conversion of the Logos (8)
To what do the former beings pertain? They are like forgetfulness and heavy sleep; being like those who dream troubled dreams, to whom sleep comes...
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Neoplatonic
II, Chapter X (4)
We must say the same thing, therefore, concerning phantasms. For if these are not true, but other things are so which have a real existence, thus...
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Western Esoteric
Chapter VI: The Divine Paradox (7)
Then again, the ideal of the artist or sculptor, which he is endeavoring to reproduce in stone or on canvas, seems very real to him. So do the...
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Sufi
The Mule and the Camel (21-30)
When I had forgotten my prosperous condition, And knew not that the grief and ills I experienced Were the effect of sleep and illusion and fancy? In l...
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Western Esoteric
Chapter VI: The Divine Paradox (The Divine Paradox:3-4)
The first thought that comes to the thinking man after he realizes the truth that the Universe is a Mental Creation of THE ALL, is that the Universe...
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Sufi
The Old Man who made no Lamentation at the Death of his Sons (11-20)
Ordinary people may see them in dreams, But I see them clearly, though wide awake. I conceal myself a while from this world, Know, O wife, outward...
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Sufi
The Prophet and his Infidel Guest (81-90)
Of the world of ideals, to confound all thought! Yea, copying thereon the fair letters of the page of ideals, To wit, eye and brow and moustache and...
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Neoplatonic
III, Chapter XXIX (2)
Why, therefore, should the man who is a lover of truth, pay attention to these useless delusions? I, indeed, do not think them to be of any value. For...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Seventh Valley or The Valley of Deprivation and Death (1)
The Hoopoe continued: 'Last of all comes the Valley of Deprivation and Death, which it is almost impossible to describe. The essence of this Valley...
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Sufi
The Disciple who blindly imitated his Shaikh (12-22)
When the vessel leaves the fountain, it sees its error; The glass also learns, when the moon sets, When his eyes are opened by the command, "Arise!" T...
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Hindu
Brahmana 3 (4.3.9)
Verily, there are just two conditions of this person: the condition of being in this world and the condition of being in the other world. There is an...
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Buddhist
Chapter 32 (2)
Not assuming the permanency or the reality of earthly phenomena, but in the conscious blessedness of a mind at perfect rest. And why? Because, the phe...
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Sufi
The Conference of the Birds
The Duck (2)
Someone asked a saintly fool: 'What are the two worlds which always occupy our thoughts?' He replied: 'Both the upper and the lower worlds are as a...
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Gnostic
The Imperfect Begetting by the Logos (13)
Like the Pleromas are the things which came into being from the arrogant thought, which are their (the Pleromas') likenesses, copies, shadows, and...
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Conclusion (10)
From the lofty heights of his Selfhood he slowly sinks into the gloomy depths of ephemerality. He falls to the level of the beast, and in brutish fash...
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Greek
Time and Celestial Bodies (46a)
Timaeus: such and so great are the images they produce, which images are copied within and are remembered by the sleepers when they awake out of the...
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Sufi
The Arab and his Wife (161-170)
What more shall I say? In that earthly shell There is naught but foam of foam of foam of foam!'" God is that foam; God is also that pure sea,...
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Western Esoteric
Chapter VI: The Divine Paradox (1)
This is the Paradox of the Universe, resulting from the Principle of Polarity which manifests when THE ALL begins to Create--hearken to it for it...
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Buddhist
Chapter 14 (7)
The Lord Buddha, in declaring the “unreality of phenomena,” also affirmed “that the whole realm of sentient life is ephemeral and illusory.”
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