The Science of Peace: An Attempt at an Exposition of the First Principles of the Science of the Self, Adhyātma-vidyāTheosophical publishing house, 1904 - 347 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 47
Stran 4
... seems to him to be - then is that searching Jîva passing through the fires of burning thought , reflection , and discrimination between the transient and the permanent , of passionate rejection of all personal and selfish pleasures and ...
... seems to him to be - then is that searching Jîva passing through the fires of burning thought , reflection , and discrimination between the transient and the permanent , of passionate rejection of all personal and selfish pleasures and ...
Stran 19
... seems to him , and indeed is , at the time , the nearest approach to that higher unity that he is seeking . The forms of this duality , wherein he is centred for the time being , beginning with rough general conceptions of spirit or ...
... seems to him , and indeed is , at the time , the nearest approach to that higher unity that he is seeking . The forms of this duality , wherein he is centred for the time being , beginning with rough general conceptions of spirit or ...
Stran 36
... seem to us to be merely ' mental ' and not ' real . ' For while we see , without doubt , that the ' I ' continues unchanged through changing things , we also see that it continues to do so only in these things and never apart from them ...
... seem to us to be merely ' mental ' and not ' real . ' For while we see , without doubt , that the ' I ' continues unchanged through changing things , we also see that it continues to do so only in these things and never apart from them ...
Stran 52
... seems to have hinted , 1 there was no superior law provided by Kant , as was most imperatively needed , to regulate and govern the fitting of sense - phenomena ( the matter ) into the so - called laws ( the forms ) of mind , the mind ...
... seems to have hinted , 1 there was no superior law provided by Kant , as was most imperatively needed , to regulate and govern the fitting of sense - phenomena ( the matter ) into the so - called laws ( the forms ) of mind , the mind ...
Stran 54
... seem to have been so selfless as Fichte's , and therefore he probably saw the truth under a slightly thicker veil . It may be that if Fichte had lived longer he would have explained the last difficulty that remains behind at the end of ...
... seem to have been so selfless as Fichte's , and therefore he probably saw the truth under a slightly thicker veil . It may be that if Fichte had lived longer he would have explained the last difficulty that remains behind at the end of ...
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Absolute abstract Advaita Advaita-Vedânta affirmation Aham ânanda answer appear aspect Âtmâ atom becomes Bhagavad-Gita Brahman cause changelessness CHAPTER chit co-existence cognition concrete connection consciousness corresponding desire dravya embodied endeavour endless enquiry etat eternal evolution existence explained fact factor feel Fichte Fichte's guna Hegel ichchhâ immortality individual infinite inner inseparable Ishvara Jiva Jîva-atom jñâna karma knowledge kriyâ limited logion manifest means metaphysic mind motion Mûla-prakriti nature necessarily necessity Negation ness non-being Non-Ego non-existent Not-I Not-Self object opposites particular peace philosophy physical planes of matter possible prakriti pralaya Pratyag-âtmâ present principle pseudo pseudo-infinite pure Purusha realise reason samsâra Samskrit sattva sense separate Shakti sheath Shiva single solar system space spirit standpoint statement Stirling subtler succession supreme tamas thing thing-in-itself thought tion triplets true truth unity universal Ego Upanishats Vaisheshika Veda Vedanta Vishnu whole words world-process world-system worship
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 64 - The golden age of English oratory, which extends over the last quarter of the eighteenth and the first quarter of the nineteenth centuries, produced no speaker, either in Parliament or at the Bar, superior in persuasive force and artistic finish to Thomas Lord Erskine.
Stran 40 - There is an insatiable desire in the human breast to resume in some short formula, some brief statement, the facts of human experience. It leads the savage to " account " for all natural phenomena by deifying the wind and the stream and the tree.
Stran v - Yet stand alone and isolated, because nothing that is embodied, nothing that is conscious of separation, nothing that is out of the eternal, can aid you.
Stran 20 - This has been said over and over again by thinkers of all ages and of all countries. The existence of the Self is certain and indubitable. The next question about it is : What is it ? Is it black ? is it white ? is it flesh and blood and bone, or nerve and brain, or rocks and rivers, mountains, heavenly orbs, or light or heat or force invisible, or time or space ? is it identical with or coextensive with the living body, or is it centred in one limb, organ or point thereof? The single answer to all...
Stran 71 - The business of the theoretical part was to conciliate Ego and Non-Ego. To this end middle term after middle term was intercalated without success. Then came reason with the absolute decision: 'Inasmuch as the Non-Ego is incapable of union with the Ego, Non-Ego there shall be none.
Stran 21 - In all the endless months, years and small and great cycles, past and to come, this self-luminous consciousness alone neither rises nor ever sets.' An unconditioned reality where time and space along with all their objects vanish is felt to be real. It is the self which is the unaffected spectator of the whole drama of ideas related to the changing moods of waking, dreaming and sleeping. We are convinced that there is \something...
Stran 119 - ... posited, the Ego also must be posited; for both are posited as divisible in regard to their reality. And only now can you say of either, it is something. For the absolute Ego of the first fundamental principle is not something (has no predicate and can have none); it is simply what it is. But now all reality is in consciousness, and of this reality that part is to be ascribed to the Non-Ego which is not to be ascribed to the Ego, and vice versa. Both are something. The Non-Ego is what the Ego...
Stran 130 - Indeed, the difference between the three parts and the three moments is only the difference between the third person, on the one hand, and the first and second, on the other, between looking at the Self and Not-Self as Being and Nothing, or as ' I ' and
Stran 217 - ... first proteid to arise was living matter, endowed in all its radicals with the property of vigorously attracting similar constituents, adding them chemically to its molecule, and thus growing ad infinitum. According to this idea, living proteid does not need to have a constant molecular weight ; it is a huge molecule, undergoing constant, never-ending formation and constant decomposition, and probably behaves towards the usual chemical molecules as the sun behaves towards small meteors.
Stran 217 - originally the whole molten mass of the earth's body was a single giant organism ; the powerful movement that its substance possessed was its life.