The science of symbols — not simply a knowledge of traditional symbols — proceeds from the qualitative significances of substances, forms. ... we are not dealing here with subjective appreciations, for the cosmic qualities are ordered both in relation... Every Branch in Me: Essays on the Meaning of Man - Seite 65herausgegeben von - 2002 - 354 SeitenEingeschränkte Leseprobe - Über dieses Buch
| Seyyed Hossein Nasr - 1972 - 190 Seiten
...symbols — proceeds from the qualitative significances of substances, forms. ... we are not dealing here with subjective appreciations, for the cosmic...perennis, see T. Burckhardt, Scienza moderna e saggezza tradizionale, Torino, 1968; see also his Alchemie, Sinn und Weltbild, Olten, 1960, which deals with... | |
| Seyyed Hossein Nasr - 1993 - 358 Seiten
...phenomena, relationships, movements, colours and other properties or states of things; we are not dealing here with subjective appreciations, for the cosmic...a hierarchy which is more real than the individual ; they are then, independent of our tastes, or rather they determine them to the extent that we are... | |
| James S. Cutsinger - 1997 - 240 Seiten
...things; we are not dealing here with subjective appreciations, for the cosmic qualities are ordered in relation to Being and according to a hierarchy which is more real than the individual." The objectivity and universality of symbols mean that sacred art is able to transmit simultaneously... | |
| Barry McDonald - 2003 - 360 Seiten
...relationships and so on. As Schuon has observed, ... we are not here dealing with subjective appréciations, for the cosmic qualities are ordered both in relation...hierarchy which is more real than the individual; they are, then, independent of our tastes . . ,34 This kind of symbolism is an altogether different... | |
| Harry Oldmeadow - 2008 - 346 Seiten
...substances, colors, forms, spatial relationships, and so on. As Schuon has observed, We are not here dealing with subjective appreciations, for the cosmic qualities...hierarchy which is more real than the individual; they are, then, independent of our tastes. This kind of symbolism is an altogether different matter... | |
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