The Vision of Aridaeus


Book Description

This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the original. Due to its age, it may contain imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions that are true to the original work.




Vision of Aridaeus


Book Description




The Vision of Aridaeus


Book Description

This Is A New Release Of The Original 1922 Edition.




The Doctrine of the Subtle Body in Western Tradition


Book Description

What... is the use, in the resurrection, of a body of flesh, blood, sinews, and bones, of limbs and organs for functions of the flesh, such as eating and drinking, excretion and procreation? Are we to continue to do all these things for eternity?-from "The Resurrection-Body"The concept that the physical body is but a manifestation of a more numinous expression of the soul sounds very Eastern to modern ears, but in fact it was one of the foundations of Christianity that the tradition abandoned long ago. In this short but profound study, first published in 1919, one of the greatest thinkers on the origins of Christianity and a renowned expert on Gnostic and Hermetic literature reconnects us with an ancient belief in the divine within us all that is, surprisingly, powerfully reflected in modern ideas about psychology and biology. No mystic himself, Mead instead finds a middle ground between superstitions of old and the oddities of advanced scientific thinking.Also available from Cosimo Classics: Mead's The Hymn of Jesus and Did Jesus Live 100 B.C.?British scholar and philosopher GEORGE ROBERT STOW MEAD (1863-1933) was educated at Cambridge University. He served as editor of The Theosophical Society's Theosophical Review, and later formed The Quest Society and edited its journal, The Quest Review. He is also the author of Notes on Nirvana (1893) and an 1896 translation of The Upanishads.




The Vision of Aridæus


Book Description

he sentence “when He was hung on the tree of theCross” contains a great puzzle. The word for “tree” inthe original is batos; this may mean the “bush” or “tree”of the cross. But the Cross for the Gnostics was a livingsymbol. It was not only the cross of dead wood, or thedead trunk of a tree lopped of its branches—a symbol ofOsiris in death; it was also the Tree of Life, and wasequated with the “Fiery Bush” out of which the Angel ofGod spake to Moses—that is the Tree of Fiery Life, inthe Paradise of man's inner nature, whence the Wordof God expresses itself to one who is worthy to hear.And this Tree of Life was also, as the Cross, the Tree ofKnowledge of Good and Evil; indeed, both are but oneTree, for the fruit of the Tree of Life is the knowledgeof good and evil, the cross of the opposites.




The Eclipses of John's Book of Revelation


Book Description

Who is the beast in Revelation? What does the number 666 mean? Who are the four horsemen of the apocalypse? Who is the author of Revelation? When was it created? Where will be the battle of the judgment day? And when? This book contains the answers to these questions. Events and visions are connected in a clear and logical explanation that corresponds with known historical events. This book is a rational and reasoned interpretation based on the analysis of the text within the book of Revelation itself and its comparison with other religious systems, written with the aim of offering essential answers.




Goethe and the Philosopher’s Stone


Book Description

Originally published in 1965, this study examines the concealed meanings in the second part of Faust, often considered obscure. It is of value not only to students of literature but also comparative religions, as it deals with Goethe’s knowledge of ancient myths, mysteries and Hellenistic religions. It is of value too, to those interested in alchemy as it traces the many alchemical references in Faust. The book gives a psychological interpretation of elements of Goethe’s personal life and work, which succeeds in making the man and the veiled references in his most profound work accessible to the modern reader.