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View Poll Results: Regarding the document "Thunder Perfect Mind"
I was not familiar with this. I like it. 3 11.11%
I was not familiar with this. I am neutral about it. 12 44.44%
I was not familiar with this. I dislike it. 3 11.11%
I was already familiar with this. I like it. 7 25.93%
I was already familiar with this. I am neutral about it. 2 7.41%
I was already familiar with this. I dislike it. 0 0%
Voters: 27. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old 05-16-2008, 01:38 PM   #11
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It reads like Vedanta.
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Old 05-16-2008, 01:41 PM   #12
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tl/dr = too long didn't read. If that was your choice, you don't need to vote.

It is missing the Magic Brownies option. . .
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Old 05-16-2008, 04:08 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
tl/dr = too long didn't read. If that was your choice, you don't need to vote.

It is missing the Magic Brownies option. . .
magic brownie = too spacey/hippie/weird?
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Old 05-16-2008, 11:21 PM   #14
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Thanks Elijah, I too am struck by its duality and beauty although I couldn't have put it as nicely as you did.

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Apostate1970
I think it would be really silly and presumptuous to say more than Elijah has said regarding "gnosis" or knowledge of the speaker. I don't think anyone has to answer that, but, since it's been asked, who do you think the speaker is Osbert? I think that trying to answer that and being able to give a sympathetic reading of the poem is what's important. Well, you know what? I'm going to be silly an presumptuous and say that I think it's Sophia.
I really am not sure who the " I " speaking is... I think it is a riddle.

I don't think the speaker is supposed to be a person but a "state of being", neither male nor female but transcending both.
There cannot be many things in real life that fit all the descriptions/attributes of the riddle.
I am not a scholar, I asked because I am curious to see if anybody has yet made sense of it.

It reminds me very much of Celtic riddles:

I have been a stag of seven tines, running
I have been a flood across a wide plain, flowing
I have been a wind over a deep lake, whispering
I have been a tear from the brilliant sun, glistening
I have been a hawk in my nest above the cliff, watching
I have been a wonder among the lovliest flowers, blooming
I have been a god with smoke to fill the head, blazing
I have been a spear that roars for blood, flying
I have been a salmon in a clear pool, swimming
I have been a hill where poets walk, singing
I have been a boar upon the hills ruthless and red, roving
I have been a breaker from the winter sea, thundering
I have been a tide of the ocean, delivering to death and returning...
Who, but I, knows the secrets of the unhewn dolmen?

I am the womb of every holt,
I am the blaze on every hill,
I am the queen of every hive,
I am the shield for every head,
I am the tomb of every hope...
Who, but I, gives birth to all that was, is and shall be?

from "The Song of Amergin" - translated by Robert Graves
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Old 05-17-2008, 03:12 AM   #15
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Apostate1970 View Post
Just felt like posting a poll!

Poll questions regard this document (in any translation)...

http://www.gnosis.org/naghamm/thunder.html

I searched the forum to see if there was any thread already started that involved any discussion of or reaction to this document and found nothing but one brief mention of it.

I am not especially interested in a detailed discussion of the nature and origin of this work or its place (or lack thereof) in Judaeo-Christianity, although if anyone else is interested in this they're certainly welcome to start such a discussion here and I'm sure I'd follow along.
It's clearly one of the most powerful documents in the Nag Hammadi find - it has a kind of poetic, spiritual power that reaches through the centuries directly to modern peoples' hearts (hence its popularity nowadays).

One reason for its popularity nowadays might be that Westerners have been primed for this kind of Feminine deity viewpoint by exposure to feminine deities from Hinduism and Buddhism.

In fact, one of the most striking things about the poem is how much it resembles, in its larding of paradox upon paradox, some of the devotional Sakti worship poetry. I wish I could remember where I once found a particularly striking parallel - it was a text in a book that discussed the Upanishads.

At any rate, I think this kind of thought is pretty ancient, and I suspect that Wisdom literature probably goes back to Neolithic roots, and even further, to times when the feminine was a more obvious metaphor for the All.
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Old 05-17-2008, 04:53 AM   #16
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Originally Posted by gurugeorge View Post
One reason for its popularity nowadays might be that Westerners have been primed for this kind of Feminine deity viewpoint by exposure to feminine deities from Hinduism and Buddhism.
Om, Tara tutare ture, soha!



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Old 05-17-2008, 05:13 AM   #17
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I was expecting something about mysticical storm chasers. I voted unfamilia / no like.
A second reading (orf the first fewstanzas) improved things, but really it didn't make sense, but it wasn't trying to be surreal, it was trying to make sense. 'Confused' or 'confusing' is the word/s.

How would you like it if I hit you with the plasma screaming, lest you die an effigy of intent, while sleeping?
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Old 05-18-2008, 01:04 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Osbert View Post

I really am not sure who the " I " speaking is... I think it is a riddle.

I don't think the speaker is supposed to be a person but a "state of being", neither male nor female but transcending both.
There cannot be many things in real life that fit all the descriptions/attributes of the riddle.
I am not a scholar, I asked because I am curious to see if anybody has yet made sense of it.
I agree with Apostate1970 that it’s probably something similar to Sophia/Isis.

If it was a poplar piece I would say that it was meant to be read aloud in temple where the priestess was supposed to be an earthly vessel for the spirit and that’s why all the “I am” stuff. But arguing against it being a popular piece is that the tone doesn’t seem to be speaking to believers but to skeptics at a time when the female religions were probably being persecuted or just fading out of popularity.

The male/female duality transcends the physical world in the Gnostic understanding of the universe. (which Thunder looks influenced by and was found with.) The perceivable physical universe is just a poor copy of the eternal side of the universe (Aeon) and Sophia is the eternal feminine aspect of the universe or part of it. The female aspect is usually associated with the Void that existed before the universe began and still remains. If god is one, she is zero. The cosmic womb.

You may want to check out the other Gnostic writings in the Nag (The origin of the World, Second Treatise of Seth.) The Gnostic stuff is really out there and the anthropomorphizing every aspect of the universe makes it especially confusing, which makes it a little understandable why they didn’t want it in the Bible.

Quote:
Originally Posted by From Second Treatise of Seth

For those who were in the world had been prepared by the will of our sister Sophia - she who is a whore - because of the innocence which has not been uttered. And she did not ask anything from the All, nor from the greatness of the Assembly, nor from the Pleroma. Since she was first, she came forth to prepare monads and places for the Son of Light and the fellow workers which she took from the elements below to build bodily dwellings from them.
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Old 05-18-2008, 06:20 PM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Osbert View Post
I really am not sure who the " I " speaking is... I think it is a riddle.

I don't think the speaker is supposed to be a person but a "state of being", neither male nor female but transcending both.
There cannot be many things in real life that fit all the descriptions/attributes of the riddle.
I am not a scholar, I asked because I am curious to see if anybody has yet made sense of it.
I think it's basically consciousness - consciousness, in the sense of the bare capacity to perceive anything at all, unbiassedly reflects all things, good and bad, everything that exists. Before thought steps in and says "this is good" or "this is bad", consciousness has already received it. Hence the "whore" idea - consciousness indiscriminately f***s all its perceptions, as it were.

The idea of the "fallen Sophia" is that this capacity to reflect all unbiassedly is in a "fallen" condition in most of us most of the time, because we think that every passing perception is our lover, we think we'll get love from it (or from the latest toy in life), and we are constantly, sadly, disappointed. For Sophia to be re-connected to Christ means for the mind to understand itself as God's vehicle - to understand that one is God's eye in this world, wherewith God perceives some of His infinite possibility, such that every perception of something existent, whether good or bad, is a perception of God by God, by means of oneself as a vehicle.

But this is monstrous, beyond good and evil, and beyond tribal ideas of God, where God is an idealisation of what's good for the tribe.
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Old 05-18-2008, 07:01 PM   #20
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Originally Posted by Apostate1970 View Post

I think it would be really silly and presumptuous to say more than Elijah has said regarding "gnosis" or knowledge of the speaker. I don't think anyone has to answer that, but, since it's been asked, who do you think the speaker is Osbert? I think that trying to answer that and being able to give a sympathetic reading of the poem is what's important. Well, you know what? I'm going to be silly an presumptuous and say that I think it's Sophia.

To quote this translator's own introduction to his translation, as it appears in a collection edited by Willis Barnstone, "In terms of religious tradition Thunder, Perfect Mind is difficult to classify. It presents no distinctively Jewish, Christian or Gnostic themes... the Jewish wisdom literature and the Isis areatologies provide texts which are parallel in tone and style...".

As for tone and style issues: I agree with what Elijah said about "confidence"... it's really "sexy"...

I also find it interesting that some of the dichotomies are straightforward opposites, seemingly irreconcilable, while others are merely paradoxical and take some thinking to resolve a meaning. For just one of many examples "Give heed to my poverty and my wealth.": one can be poor in one respect and yet rich in another, so this might be asking the hearer to consider what are the true dimensions of wealth, akin to "Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also." Matthew 6:19-24. Obviously I am not actually intending any connection between these verses but just pointing out the notion.

I also find that, while the paradoxical nature seems to demand reflection and thought to decipher, and while we are exhorted to reflect by the poem itself, the overall tone is more that of a mantra... not meant to be analyzed at all but to be recited poetically or even in a rapid-fire way almost as if to induce a sort of meditative stupor. I think these two opposite reading approaches actually illustrate the thesis/antithesis aspect of the work in a sort of self-reflexive way and thus lend it a kind of consistency which it superficially lacks... and I have to say that I think that's really clever!

Here is wikipedia's writeup on it for anyone who is interested and hasn't already looked it up.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Thunder_Perfect_Mind
also from there:

Though the poem is a recent addition to our literature, it has already had an effect on contemporary culture. Excerpts from the poem were used by Toni Morrison as epigraphs to her novels, Jazz and Paradise.


Quote:

To quote the wiki, "Examples of the genre abound in Old Testament literature.". But I think that if you look at canonical OT literature this is just really not correct at all. There may be some riddle aspects in some of the prophetic books but they are not at all "abundant" and they are in a male voice. Of course if we look at extracanonical literature then yes it is somewhat more common.

The closest you can find to this in the canonical literature is in the Catholic bible in Wisdom chapters 6-8. There are very obvious differences here but some of the themes and concerns, and the exhortative and laudatory aspects, and the presence of the feminine are all in common. If anyone does read this they'd have to read all three chapters to get a sense of the commonality.

http://www.newadvent.org/bible/wis006.htm

Ok, I've said enough and I don't want to turn this thread into a bible study thread.

Thank You and others for your comments bringing some things to my attention and enlightenment ...

I am still mostly neutral but can see why others like it.
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