| Charles Le Gai Eaton, Gai Eaton - 1985 - 256 pages
...rather than to the Quran as such. The Bible is a coat of many colours. The Quran is a single fabric to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be abstracted. In the Muslim view, revelation bypasses human intelligence and the limitations of that... | |
| Jan Aertsen - 1988 - 432 pages
...signify the essences of the things, are like numbers: any addition changes the species (2.3.). And that to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken away is a certain measure. To this knowledge 'per viam diffinitionis' corresponds the ontological way of... | |
| Dorothy Heathcote - 1991 - 219 pages
...modification in process of developing a simpler form'.5 Louis Danz says, 'Form is that kind of organization to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken'.6 Third, form is 'fitness of purpose' of all the material contained in it. Form making is not... | |
| Hilton Hotema - 1996 - 86 pages
...Substance". — Blavatsky, Secret Doc. I, 1/.6. "The Essence of the Divine Ego is Pure Flame, an Entity to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken" (Curtiss, Key Of The Universe, p. 263). "Fire Philosophy is the foundation of all religions. ... Without... | |
| Helena P. Blavatsky - 1996 - 138 pages
...pure ..shadow, from the pi vine Ego, (Note - The Essence of the Divine Ego is "pure flame" an entity to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken; it cannot, therefore, be diminished even by countless numbers of lower minds, detached from it like... | |
| Harriette A. Curtiss - 1996 - 400 pages
...that has not been redeemed, disintegrates. "The essence of the Divine Ego is 'pure flame,' an entity to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken ; it cannot, therefore, be diminished, even by countless numbers of lower minds, detached from it like... | |
| Alekseĭ Stepanovich Khomi︠a︡kov, Ivan Vasilʹevich Kireevskiĭ - 1998 - 372 pages
...subject to logical determination. He expressed this idea precisely, strictly, in a defmitive form, to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be subtracted. That is Khomiakov's achievement in the domain of theology. He opened a new era in the history... | |
| Paul Weiss - 2000 - 284 pages
...truths. There is no one solid rock on which everything rests. Even Being, which necessarily is, and to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken away, is related to what is other than it. Epistemology is a reputable subject. Since it is pursued by real... | |
| René Guénon - 2001 - 128 pages
...according to appearances, which in reality it never left— for nothing could be outside of the Principle, to which nothing can be added and from which nothing can be taken away, because It is the indivisible totality of unique Existence. In the intense light of countries of the... | |
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