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Mysticism Dictionary - D

A Wisdom Archive on Mysticism Dictionary - D

Mysticism Dictionary - D

A selection of articles related to Mysticism Dictionary - D

We recommend this article: Mysticism Dictionary - D - 1, and also this: Mysticism Dictionary - D - 2.

ARTICLES RELATED TO Mysticism Dictionary - D

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Porphyry, Porphyrius

Porphyry, or Porphyrius. A Neo-Platonist and a most distinguished writer, only second to Plotinus as a teacher and philosopher.

 

He was born before the middle of the third century A.D., at Tyre, since he called himself a Tyrian and is supposed to have belonged to a Jewish family. Though himself thoroughly Hellenized and a Pagan, his name Melek (a king) does seem to indicate that he had Semitic blood in his veins. Modern critics very justly consider him the most practically philosophical, and the soberest, of all the Neo-Platonists. A distinguished writer, he was specially famous for his controversy with Iamblichus regarding the evils attendant upon the practice of Theurgy. He was, however, finally converted to the views of his opponent.

 

A natural-born mystic, he followed, as did his master Plotinus, the pure Indian Raj-Yoga training, which leads to the union of the Soul with the Over-Soul or Higher Self (Buddhi-Manas). He complains, however, that, all his efforts notwithstanding, he did not reach this state of ecstacy before he was sixty, while Plotinus was a proficient in it. This was so, probably because while his teacher held physical life and body in the greatest contempt, limiting philosophical research to those regions where life and thought become eternal and divine, Porphyry devoted his whole time to considerations of the hearing of philosophy on practical life. "The end of philosophy is with him morality", says a biographer, "we might almost say, holiness - the healing of man’s infirmities, the imparting to him a purer and more vigorous life. Mere knowledge, however true, is not of itself sufficient ; knowledge has for its object life in accordance with Nous" - "reason", translates the biographer.

 

As we interpret Nous, however, not as Reason, but mind (Manas) or the divine eternal Ego in man, we would translate the idea esoterically, and make it read "the occult or secret knowledge has for its object terrestrial life in accordance with Nous, or our everlasting reincarnating Ego", which would be more consonant with Porphyry’s idea, as it is with esoteric philosophy. (See Porphyry’s De Abstinentia ., 29.) Of all the Neo-Platonists, Porphyry approached the nearest to real Theosophy as now taught by the Eastern secret school. This is shown by all our modern critics and writers on the Alexandrian school, for "he held that the Soul should be as far as possible freed from the bonds of matter, . . . be ready . . . to cut off the whole body". (Ad Marcellam, 34.) He recommends the practice of abstinence, saying that "we should be like the gods if we could abstain from vegetable as well as animal food". He accepts with reluctance theurgy and mystic incantation as those are "powerless to purify the noëtic (manasic) principle of the soul": theurgy can "but cleanse the lower or psychic portion, and make it capable of perceiving lower beings, such as spirits, angels and gods" (Aug. De Civ. Dei. X., 9), just as Theosophy teaches. "Do not defile the divinity", he adds, with the vain imaginings of men you will not injure that which is for ever blessed (Buddhi-Manas) but you will blind yourself to the perception of the greatest and most vital truths". (Ad Marcellam,18.)

 

"If we would he free from the assaults of evil spirits, we must keep ourselves clear of those things over which evil spirits have power, for they attack not the pure soul which has no affinity with them". (De Abstin. ii., 43.) This is again our teaching. The Church Fathers held Porphyry as the bitterest enemy, the most irreconcilable to Christianity. Finally, and once more as in modern Theosophy, Porphyry - as all the Neo-Platonists, according to St. Augustine - "praised Christ while they disparaged Christianity"; Jesus, they contended, as we contend, "said nothing himself against the pagan deities, but wrought wonders by their help". "They could not call him as his disciples did, God, but they honoured him as one of the best and wisest of men". (De Civ. Dei., X1X., 23.) Yet, "even in the storm of controversy, scarcely a word seems to have been uttered against the private life of Porphyry. His system prescribed purity and . . . he practised it".

(See A Dict. of Christian Biography, Vol. IV., "Porphyry".)

 

(See also: Porphyry, Porphyrius, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Druids

Druids Members of a priestly hierarchy among the ancient Celts of Britain, Gaul, and Ireland, composed of the three Orders of Druids, Bards, and Ovates. According to the Gaulish reports mentioned by Julius Caesar, Druidism was founded in Britain, which remained in his time its headquarters, candidates for the priesthood being sent to that island from Gaul for their training.

 

The Welsh tradition confirms this, stating the The Wisdom had always existed; that in remote times it was known simply as Gwyddoniaeth (science) and its teachers as the Gwyddoniaid (sing., Gwyddon); that knowledge of it had declined until at some unknown period a wiseman named Tydain Tad Awen arose and taught it to his three disciples, Plenydd, Gwron, and Alawn, who in their turn taught it to the race of the Cymry. From that time forth it was known as Derwyddoniaeth or Druidism, "the wisdom taught in oak groves."

 

Classical references to the Druids are many, coming from about 200 B.C. until about 200 A.D. Those written before Caesar made his attack on Gaul speak of the Druids as possessors of a high wisdom; the very first reference says that it was held in Greece that philosophy came to the Greeks from the barbaroi or foreigners: the Brahmins of India, the Magi of Persia, the Egyptian priesthood, and the Druids.

 

While the Romans were fighting the Celts, writers, beginning with Caesar, repeat more or less what has been said before about the wisdom of the Druids but, following Caesar, have much to say about their atrocities. When the Romans were no longer at war with the Druidic Celts, however, the references to the Druids are similar to the early ones, with no mention of atrocities.

 

Blavatsky stated that Druidism was the one branch of the sacred Mysteries of antiquity in the Western world which had not degenerated; and that during the campaigns of Caesar and his forces in Gaul, three million Gauls were killed and Druidism virtually wiped out there. It is Caesar who is responsible for the current notion that the Gauls and Britons were crude savages and the Druids barbarous and cruel. He stated first that the Druids of Gaul, who were judges as well as priests, inflicted excommunication as their severest sentence, passed even on the worst criminals. Excommunication was their capital punishment. Later on in his book he describes the famous wicker cages filled with criminals (with just men added when there were not criminals enough) who were then burnt. The two statements are contradictory. The later statement is entirely unsupported; the former is not only compatible with the Druids' reputation for profound wisdom and great humanity, but is supported indirectly by practically every classical reference which mentions the Druids at all.

 

In Gaul in Caesar's time Druidism was very highly organized and controlled the whole civilization, a fact Caesar is known to have deliberately understated, for in many respects Gaulish civilization was more advanced than Roman. We know nothing of Druidism in Britain from the classical writers, except that Britain was its headquarters and place of origin, and that the Druids were massacred in Mona (Anglesea), an island in northwest Wales which seems to have been the Druids headquarters in Britain.

 

Of Druidism in Ireland we know even less: the Irish Sagas do not indicate that the Druids there were either priests or jurists, or indeed very important people; they appear rather as necromancers at the royal courts, astrologers, magicians, etc. Had Druidism been an organized system, as in Gaul and presumably in Britain, Patrick, the Christian missionary, could hardly have converted the whole island with the little trouble he had. In Britain, however, as soon as the Romans with their proscription of Druidism had departed in 410, there is every reason to think that Druidism flamed up again: Welsh literature, from the 6th to the end of the 15th century, is full of interesting references.

 

Greek and Roman authors all make much of the Druidic belief in reincarnation. One of them relates that you could always borrow money to be repaid in such and such a future life on earth -- showing that it was reincarnation, the coming back as a human being, and not transmigration, the coming back as an animal, that was taught. The likeness between Druidism and Pythagoreanism is often mentioned, which perhaps suggested the legend that Pythagoras studied not only under Eastern but also under Western or Druidic teachers; and that other belief, that philosophy came to Greece not only from the East, but also from the Druids.

 

(See also: Druids, Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on S

S - The nineteenth letter; numerically, sixty. In Hebrew it is the fifteenth letter, Samech, held as holy because "the sacred name of god is Samech". Its symbol is a prop, or a pillar, and a phallic egg. In occult geometry it is represented as a circle quadrated by a cross, . In the Kabbalah the "divisions of Gan-Eden or paradise" are similarly divided.

 

(See also: S, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on To On

To On (Ancient Greek). The "Being", the "Ineffable All" of Plato. He" whom no person has seen except the Son".

 

(See also: To On, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on In

In (Chin.). The female principle of matter, impregnated by Yo, the male ethereal principle, and precipitated thereafter down into the universe.

 

(See also: In, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Will

Will. In metaphysics and occult philosophy, Will is that which governs the manifested universes in eternity. Will is the one and sole principle of abstract eternal MOTION, or its ensouling essence. " The will", says Van Helmont, "is the first of all powers. . . . The will is the property of all spiritual beings and displays itself in them the more actively the more they are freed from matter." And Paracelsus teaches that "determined will is the beginning of all magical operations. It is because men do not perfectly imagine and believe the result, that the (occult) arts are so uncertain, while they might he perfectly certain." Like all the rest, the Will is septenary in its degrees of manifestation. Emanating from the one, eternal, abstract and purely quiescent Will (Atma in Layam), it becomes Buddhi in its Alaya state, descends lower as Mahat (Manas), and runs down the ladder of degrees until the divine Eros becomes, in its lower, animal manifestation, erotic desire. Will as an eternal principle is neither spirit nor substance but everlasting ideation. As well expressed by Schopenhauer in his Parerga, " in sober reality there is neither matter nor spirit. The tendency to gravitation in a stone is as unexplainable as thought in the human brain. . . If matter can - no one knows why -  - fall to the ground, then it can also - no one knows why - -think. . . . As soon, even in mechanics, as we trespass beyond the purely mathematical, as soon as we reach the inscrutable adhesion, gravitation, and so on, we are faced by phenomena which are to our senses as mysterious as the WILL."

 

(See also: Will, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on D

D. Both in the English and Hebrew alphabets the fourth letter, whose numerical value is four. The symbolical signification in the Kabbala of the Daleth is "door". It is the Greek delta D, through which the world (whose symbol is the tetrad or number four,) issued, producing the divine seven. The name of the Tetrad was Harmony with the Pythagoreans, "because it is a diatessaron in sesquitertia". With the Kabbalists, the divine name associated with Daleth was Daghoul.

 

(See also: D, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Cecco d’Ascoli

Cecco d’Ascoli. Surnamed "Francesco Stabili." He lived in the thirteenth century, and was considered the most famous astrologer in his day. A work of his published at Basle in 1485, and called Commentarii in Sphaeram Joannis de Sacrabosco, is still extant. He was burnt alive by the Inquisition in 1327.

 

(See also: Cecco d’Ascoli, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Mystica Vannus Iacchi

Mystica Vannus Iacchi. Commonly translated the mystic Fan: but in an ancient terra-cotta in the British Museum the fan is a Basket such as the Ancients’ Mysteries displayed with mystic contents: Inman says with emblematic testes.

 

(See also: Mystica Vannus Iacchi, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Brahmarandhra

Brahmarandhra (Sanskrit) A spot on the crown of the head connected by Sushumna, a cord in the spinal column, with the heart. A mystic term having its significance only in mysticism.

 

(See also: Brahmarandhra, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Alkahest

Alkahest (Arab.). The universal solvent in Alchemy (see "Alchemy "); but in mysticism, the Higher Self, the union with which makes of matter (lead), gold, and restores all compound things such as the human body and its attributes to their primeval essence.

 

(See also: Alkahest, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Ananda-Lahari

Ananda-Lahari (Sanskrit). "The wave of joy"; a beautiful poem written by Sankaracharya, a hymn to Parvati, very mystical and occult.

 

(See also: Ananda-Lahari, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Abiegnus Mons

Abiegnus Mons (Latin). A mystic name, from whence as from a certain mountain, Rosicrucian documents are often found to be issued -  "Monte Abiegno". There is a connection with Mount Meru, and other sacred hills.

 

(See also: Abiegnus Mons, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Ab-Soo

Ab-Soo (Chald.). The mystic name for Space, meaning the dwelling of Ab the "Father", or the head of the source of the Waters of Knowledge. The lore of the latter is concealed in the invisible space or akasic regions.

 

(See also: Ab-Soo, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Alaya

Alaya (Sanskrit). The Universal Soul (See Secret Doctrine Vol. I. pp. 47 et seq.). The name belongs to the Tibetan system of the contemplative Mahayana School. Identical with Akasa in its mystic sense, and with Mulaprakriti, in its essence, as it is the basis or root of all things.

 

(See also: Alaya, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Al-ait

Al-ait (Phœn.). The God of Fire, an ancient and very mystic name in Koptic Occultism.

 

(See also: Al-ait, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Archontes

Archontes (Ancient Greek). The archangels after becoming Ferouers (q.v.) or their own shadows, having mission on earth; a mystic ubiquity; implying a double life; a kind of hypostatic action, one of purity in a higher region, the other of terrestrial activity exercised on our plane.

(See Iamblichus, De Mysterüs II., Chap. 3.)

 

(See also: Archontes, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Arani

Arani (Sanskrit). The "female Arani" is a name of the Vedic Aditi (esoterically, the womb of the world).

Arani is a Swastika, a disc-like wooden vehicle, in which the Brahmins generated fire by friction with pramantha, a stick, the symbol of the male generator. A mystic ceremony with a world of secret meaning in it and very sacred, perverted into phallic significance by the materialism of the age.

 

(See also: Arani, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Arasa Maram

Arasa Maram (Sanskrit). The Hindu sacred tree of knowledge. In occult philosophy a mystic word.

 

(See also: Arasa Maram, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Aski-kataski

Aski-kataski-haix-tetrax-damnameneus-aision. These mystic words, which Athanasius Kircher tells us meant " Darkness, Light, Earth, Sun, and Truth", were, says Hesychius, engraved upon the zone or belt of the Diana of Ephesus. Plutarch says that the priests used to recite these words over persons who were possessed by devils.

 

(See also: Aski-kataski, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 

Mysticism Dictionary - D: Spiritual Theosophical Dictionary on Ain-Aior

Ain-Aior (Chald.). The only "Self-existent" a mystic name for divine substance.

 

(See also: Ain-Aior, Theosophy, Spirituality, Body mind and Soul, Spiritual Dictionary, )

 




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