http://www.ponderabout.com/archives/706/the-paradox-of-th...
Rated • 1 review • blogs • ponderabout.com
Rated • 1 review • blogs • ponderabout.com
Rated • 1 review • history • gnosticliberationfront.com
As Aristophanes suggests in Plato's Symposium, since we are incarnated in this realm bound anatomically (usually) to one gender only, we tend to look outward to regain our lost wholeness. As social, gendered mammals this has a certain validity. But since we are also androgynous psyches or spirits, this validity is only one side of the paradox. Loving and bonding to others is a key part of our destiny, but we are not fully capable of this without a return to our inner wholeness. In the unfeminine squareness of the 1950s a man would stereotypically introduce his wife: "And here's the little woman, my better half." I never cease to be amazed at how revealing are the most seemingly simple of unconscious statements. The above introduction manages to be patronizingly undervaluing and sentimentally idealizing at the same time, as well as revealing the essential flaw in the relationship. Multiply two half-persons and you get a quarter not a whole.
Rated • 1 review • wicca • childrenofthecode.org
n this interview Dr. Shlain speculates that becoming alphabet literate masculinized our minds in ways that drove the rise of monotheistic religions, democracy, and science. He adds that this occurred at the expense of the holistic-feminine (hence the title of his best-selling book "The Alphabet vs. The Goddess").
Rated • 1 review • cocreatingourreality.com
What would happen if you followed someone around for 100 days as they put Universal Laws & Principles into practice? Laws such as: the Law of Attraction, Law of Deliberate Creation and the Laws of Prosperity and Abundance. That was the initial inspiration behind Co-Creating Our Reality
Rated • 1 review • new age • wikipedia.org
From the page: "(comprising the Stanzas of Dzyan) is a reputedly ancient text of Tibetan origin. The Stanzas formed the basis for The Secret Doctrine, one of the foundational works of the theosophical movement, by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky in 1875."
Rated • 0 reviews • space exploration • authorsden.com