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Mysticism Glossary - K

A Wisdom Archive on Mysticism Glossary - K

Mysticism Glossary - K

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ARTICLES RELATED TO Mysticism Glossary - K

Mysticism Glossary - K: Theosophy Dictionary on Agent, Universal

Agent, Universal. See PHILOSOPHER'S STONE

 

(See also: Agent, Universal , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Memory

Memory {SD, BCW}

 

(See also: Memory , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Self

Self Theosophical literature distinguishes between self and ego: self is a purely spiritual unit, divine in essence, the same in every being, expressed as "I am"; egos are many, different in different beings, and expressed as "I am I."

 

Egos are indirect or reflected consciousnesses, seeing themselves as apart from other egos, each having its own individualized characteristics. But the self or atman is the purest and strongest intuition of being as a universal principle and as the summit of the hierarchy called man. It is pure consciousness, the essential principle which gives to every person knowledge of selfhood. As it has no egoic consciousness, it seems to our reason to be unconsciousness. To become self-conscious, a vehicle is needed, so that the self may see itself reflected as in a mirror.

 

In humans what is called the personal self is a compound, in which the true selfhood or atmic ray shines dimly through many screens. This causes our various mental states to be regarded as pertaining to our own individuality, though they are actually influences which flow into and out of the mind, and to which we attribute a false sense of ownership, as when we say, "I am angry," instead of "I am experiencing anger." The path of liberation frees us progressively from these false selves; we abandon the heresy of separateness, and at last

 

See the true self within us as being identical with that self in all beings.

 

(See also: Self , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Existence

Existence (from Latin exsisto standing forth, emerging)

 

Although often used interchangeably with being, in theosophy being refers to abstract continuity in spirit, while existence means the phenomenal manifestation of an entity in the phenomenal worlds. Therefore being is the noumenon and existence is the phenomenon. Hence one can speak of the causes of existence (nidanas), or of all existences being dissolved. The Absolute, a cosmic hierarch, is defined with equal appropriateness as absolute existence and as non-existence.

 

Non-existence is described as absolute being, existence, and consciousness (SD 1:39). Fichte makes a proper distinction between being (Seyn) and existence (Daseyn), the former being the noumenal One, and the latter the phenomenal manifold through which the One is known.

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Manifestation

Manifestation.

 

See MANVANTARA

 

(See also: Manifestation , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Reality

Reality Words such as reality, truth, and good are understood in reference to their opposites; and the opposite of reality is appearance or illusion. There can be but one fundamental or all-pervading reality, and the word in this sense becomes an equivalent to the one All, parabrahman, by contrast with which all else is maya or appearance.

 

Reality when implying various conceptions is therefore a relative term, and we can but say that one thing is real by comparison with another thing which is relatively unreal. A dream seems real enough until we awake, and then our waking mind seems real; yet this also will seem unreal when we awake to a still higher consciousness.

 

Reality, like truth and unity, cannot be an object of knowledge except by intuition, which then functions on its own plane; for any mental faculty beneath intuition is itself relatively unreal, and its findings or deductions partake of the nature of their source; and all such deductions are understandable only by reference to their opposites. It is precisely this existence in nature of opposites which brings about the various mayas under which human understanding necessarily labors.

 

(See also: Reality , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Pagan

Pagan [from Latin paganus an inhabitant of the country, a villager; cf peasant]

 

Heathen, the Germanic parallel in origin and meaning, was also used to distinguish an urban dweller or cultured man from a country dweller or rustic; and so both words became terms of inferiority and ultimately of reproach. Pagans and heathen, in recent European usage, are those who are not Christian, Jews, or Moslems.

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Master, Masters

Master, Masters Adopted in theosophical literature to designate those human beings further progressed on the evolutionary pathway than the general run of humanity, from which are drawn the saviors of humanity and the founders of the world-religions.

 

These great human beings (also known by the Sanskrit term mahatma, "great self") are the representatives in our day of a brotherhood of immemorial antiquity running back into the very dawn of historic time, and for ages beyond it.

 

It is a self-perpetuating brotherhood formed of individuals who, however much they may differ among themselves in evolution, have all attained mahatmaship, and whose lofty purposes comprise among other things the constant aiding in the regeneration of humanity, its spiritual and intellectual as well as psychic guidance, and in general the working of the best spiritual, intellectual, psychic, and moral good to mankind. From time to time members from their ranks, or their disciples, enter the outside world publicly in order to inspire mankind with their teachings.

 

Two of Blavatsky's teachers became publicly known under the names of Master M (Morya) and Master KH (Koot Hoomi). Some of their correspondence with one of Blavatsky's earlier theosophical helpers has been published as The Mahatma Letters to A. P. Sinnett.

 

(See also: Master, Masters , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Am

Am 'em (Hebrew) Mother; occasionally any female ancestor; also a mother-city, and by the same metaphor occasionally the earth as the common mother of all.

 

See also AIMA; 'IMMA' `ILLA'AH

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Path

Path.

 

See MARGA

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Seven

Seven The fundamental number of manifestation, frequently found in the different cosmogonies as well as in many religious dogmas and observances of the different ancient peoples.

 

Although ten was called one of the perfect numbers by the Pythagoreans, seven was unique in their series of numbers because it has all the "perfection of the Unit -- the number of numbers. For as absolute unity is uncreated, and impartite (hence number-less) and no number can produce it, so is the seven: no digit contained within the decade can beget or produce it" (SD 2:582). Seven is the number of the manifested universe, while ten or twelve is the number of the unmanifested universe.

 

Pythagoras taught that seven was composed of the numbers three and four, explaining that "on the plane of the noumenal world, the triangle was, as the first conception of the manifested Deity, its image: 'Father-Mother-Son'; and the Quaternary, the perfect number, was the noumenal, ideal root of all numbers and things on the physical plane" (ibid.). Further, seven was called by the Pythogoreans the vehicle of life for it consisted of body and spirit: the body was held to consist of four principal elements, while the spirit was in manifestation triple, comprising the monad, intellect or essential reason, and mind.

 

There are innumerable instances of sevening -- the seven days of the week, the seven colors of the spectrum, the seven notes of the musical scale -- while special emphasis is placed upon the seven human and cosmic principles; the seven senses (five senses now in manifestation and two more to be attained in the future through evolutionary unfolding); the seven cosmic elements; the seven root-races and seven subraces; the seven kingdoms, human and below; the seven rounds; the seven lokas and talas; the seven manifested globes of the planetary chain; the seven sacred planets; the seven racial buddhas; the seven dhyani-bodhisattvas and -buddhas; the seven Logoi; etc.

 

Man as well as nature is called saptaparna (seven-leaved plant), symbolized by the triangle above the square {illust}. While the senary was applied to man in all ranges from the physical to the spiritual, when completed by the atman, thus making the septenary, the latter signified the entire range of the constitution, whether of man or nature, crowned by the immortal spirit.

 

In Hindu literature the number seven continually appears: the saptarshis (the seven sages), the seven superior and inferior worlds, the seven hosts of deities, the seven holy cities, the seven holy islands, seas, or mountains, the seven deserts, the seven sacred trees, etc. In Greece seven was often connected with the gods and goddesses: Mars had seven attendants, seven was sacred to Pallas Athene and to Phoebus Apollo -- the latter with his seven-stringed lyre playing hymns to septenary nature as well as to the seven-rayed sun; Niobe's seven sons and seven daughters, etc.

 

Apart from mythological considerations, in physical life manifestations of the number seven occur continuously: "if the mysterious Septenary Cycle is a law in nature, and it is one, as proven; if it is found controlling the evolution and involution (or death) in the realms of entomology, ichthyology and ornithology, as in the Kingdoms of the Animal, mammalia and man -- why cannot it be present and acting in Kosmos, in general, in its natural (though occult) divisions of time, races, and mental development?" (SD 2:623n).

 

Seven is indeed the sacred number of life, and with the circle and the cross it forms a triad of primordial symbols of the ancient wisdom.

 

(See also: Seven , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Angel of the Face

Angel of the Face In Roman Catholicism, a term for the archangel Michael; identical with Jehovah, and the host brought forth from the Great Mother (SD 2:479-80; 1:434n, 459).

 

(See also: Angel of the Face , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Paleozoic Age, Era

Paleozoic Age, Era.

 

See GEOLOGICAL ERAS

 

(See also: Paleozoic Age, Era , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Age of Copper

Age of Copper See HESIOD, AGES OF

 

(See also: Age of Copper , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Adam Qadmon

Adam Qadmon

 

See 'ADAM QADMON

 

(See also: Adam Qadmon , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Cause

Cause(s). See KARMA; NIDANA; FIRST CAUSE

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Cosmos

Cosmos. See KOSMOS

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Theosophy Dictionary on Ab Hati

Ab Hati (Egyptian) The animal soul, heart, or feelings in F. Lambert's rendering of the Egyptian sevenfold human constitution (SD 2:633).

 

(See also: Ab Hati , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Plant, Plants

Plant, Plants

 

See VEGETABLE KINGDOM

 

(See also: Plant, Plants , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Desire

Desire A word whose shades of meaning range from mere animal desire to that of cosmic kama or eros which "first arose in It," bringing spirit into union with matter and giving rise to the creation or emanation of various classes of beings.

 

It can also be lofty spiritual aspiration, the yearning upwards with the undying desire for the divine, or impersonal love, or again, the urge to become united or one with others. Many words overlap it in meaning, such as will, attraction, love, and cupidity, and it is generally used as a translation of the Sanskrit kama.

 

Philosophically, it is often synonymous with abstract will, as when kama is called sometimes desire and sometimes will, so that will and desire seem to blend into one on the higher ranges. In the saying, behind will stands desire, will is a colorless force set in motion by desire, much as a current is set up by an electromotive force. From another viewpoint, will, as an abstract motor in the human constitution, arises from the higher or spiritual-intellectual ranges of the kama principle itself, for "Will and Desire are the higher and lower aspects of one and the same thing" (BCW 12:702).

 

See also KAMA; EROS

 

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

 

Mysticism Glossary - K: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Religion

Religion [from Latin religare to bind back, implying obligation; or from relegere to select, distinguish among various elements for the choosing of the best; ponder]

 

In theosophy individual religion of conduct means faith in his own essential divinity as a source of wisdom and an unerring and infallible guide in conduct; an ever-growing realization of that truth, an ever-growing consciousness of one's spiritual identity with the divine in nature; and constant devotion to the ideals thus inspired. Religion means a self-sacrificing devotion to truth, a resolve to live in harmony with all other lives, a sacrificing of the personal self to the greater self.

 

In theosophy there is no divorce between the devotional and speculative functions of the mind; science and philosophy do not conflict with the innate sense of rectitude. Ethics are not based on expediency, a social compact, or a special revelation, but are inherent in the laws of the universe.

 

The ancient wisdom is the quintessence of all religions, the universal parent-source of all faiths; and in proportion as each great world religion rises to the height of its own possibilities, so will the external divergences among the different faiths of mankind blend into the original fundamental unity.

 

(See also: Religion , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)

 

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