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10-17-2010, 05:38 AM | #11 |
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For what it's worth I've posted a few articles along these lines citing in some detail the views found in sources limted to the first century c.e. and the decades earlier -- Plutarch and Philo, of course, but also Antiochus and Apuleius. "Demonology - the basics of Middle Platonic beliefs" looks at some and contains links to others.
My posts are not as wide-ranging as Kapyong's survey, but elaborate a little on a few narrow areas that are related to this survey. Neil |
10-17-2010, 03:32 PM | #12 | |
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Gday Neil,
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I read it often. I also pointed Earl there - hope that works out better than Rational Sceptics... K. |
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10-17-2010, 03:38 PM | #13 | |
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My opinion about the demons in the air is that they should be understood as we understand memes. Gods are like the laws of the universe broken up to their particular duty. And you get questions about what is which like with Plato and what is Love? a demon or immortal? They go with demon saying it’s not a constant law/god in the universe but an intellectual force(meme) in the world.
Now how we understand the transfer of ideas today is different, still probably difficult to articulate but then air was sometimes seen as the medium which the ideas traveled and existed, since it wasn’t like any of the other elements were present. This is why you get talk about demons floating around statues because you were exposing yourself to new memes when you are introduced to new interpretations of a god or statue of a deceased philosopher/poet/hero. It looks like you are taking the divide between spirit/matter heaven/earth as being spacial and I’m not sure if that’s correct. Form and matter work in conjunction in platonic thought, where matter is perceptible by the senses and form by the intellect. On a side note; not sure if you already know this one but there was a good passage of a sacrifice in the intellectual realm/heaven that Philo was interpreting Moses as going up to, where he said that was the only place a sacrifice could be made. Quote:
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10-17-2010, 03:39 PM | #14 | |
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Gday,
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He mixed and matched all sorts of ideas. I don't think he'd have any problem with mixing and rejecting and adding all sorts of religious and philosophical ideas into his new way. After all, HE had personally been to the 3rd heaven, he was like Enoch, Ezra, Aridaeus, etc. People who have travelled the heavens or been out-of-body, or met angels or faeries or hidden masters etc. have this strange need to tell people how they think it really is. K. |
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10-17-2010, 06:27 PM | #15 | |||
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Gday,
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I have placed Paul firmly in the 1st C. And my references have been ordered by date so that I can show keys ideas were expressed before or around the time of Paul in the 1st C. Later, ideas grew wildly in the 1st through 4th. Quote:
But I'm gunna try and focus on : 1st C. the Lower Heaven. K. |
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10-17-2010, 11:52 PM | #16 | |
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I strongly doubt that 'Paul' has been the author of all that ... There was no correlation between Paul and Catholic Christianity. Only when will be revealed the true profile of the historic character, now known as 'Paul of Tarsus', the scholars will realize about the coarse error in which they are incurred whole generations of scholars The apparent name 'Paul' is derived from a latin attribute, 'paulus', whose meaning is 'small' (referring to a person, it means 'small of statura'). Anyone who has been the character pointed out by the counterfeiters fathers with such an attribute, rather that with his real name, the fact remains that he was genuinely gnostic and that, also, at the time when he lived, there was no any christianism to which convert you, since Catholic Christianity saw the light between years 140-150 Finally, there has to be underlined that this character, thus as it is proposed by the New Testament literature, is anything but 'univocal', since it is the resulted of a syncretic-literary 'merging' of two historical and distinct figures... Greetings Littlejohn . |
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10-21-2010, 03:06 PM | #17 | ||
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Gday,
Guess I'll be posting back here now :-) Origen's Homily 1 on Genesis refers to the Waters Above and Below : Quote:
Also note his comments about the firmament being corporeal, and the 1st heaven being spiritual, which is our mind : Quote:
Here is my picture of all that : Kapyong |
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10-22-2010, 08:16 AM | #18 |
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Very interesting thread
Are any of you aware of the idea of the Ray of Creation expressed by Gurdjieff in The Fourth Way and by Boris Mouravieff in Gnosis? Mouravieff claims that he is espousing the Esoteric Tradition of the Eastern Orthodox Church in his three book series Gnosis.
The description of the Cosmos as a Ray of Creation and composed of different elements called Hydrogens seems to me, very correlated to these ideas. In fact, the different Cosmos are all based on laws that form the basis for the Cosmos beneath them and from which the subsequent Cosmos forms new laws. In this formulation the moon is found at the farthest end of the Ray of Creation and is considered to be outer darkness. We as humans are considered food for the moon which I believe is not a good thing to be. The other thing that I find a parallel with the beings that inhabit the Air is in the Archons as well as the Flyers/Predators discussed in Carlos Castaneda's works. In each case these are beings without intent but who inhabit our world as non-organic beings and who directly affect our thought process. Don Juan refers to them as non-organic, energetic beings. They seem to be the source of much of the mind chatter that we are subject to in our existence and which is the basis of so much of our negative energy. The Christian tradition calls them Demons, the Hindu's call them Asuras, the gnostics call them Archons. In my view these Archons have access to our thought process through the sarx and that renewing of our minds is what gives us power over them. That was very much the focus of the monks that wrote the Philokalia and it seems to me to be the main focus of meditation as expressed in both the Hindu and Buddhist traditions. If you ask me, Romans 7&8 is the most powerful description of this process that is expressed in the Bible. It completely describes the nature of the attacks and only alludes to the solution in unclear terms. This is why I think the Orthodox Christian tradition is so abjectly powerless spiritually. |
10-23-2010, 05:09 AM | #19 | ||
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Andrew Criddle |
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01-05-2011, 01:10 PM | #20 | |
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Gday,
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K. |
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