
Source: Problems Of Humanity (1944), p. 133
First Glance at Adrienne von Speyr (1968)
Source: Problems Of Humanity (1944), p. 133
Source: From the interview with de Il Viaggio Magico, Il Viaggio Magico interview with Roberta Floris http://www.viaggiomagico.net/intervista.php?id=48, Viaggio Magico, viaggiomagico.net.
[4] Symbol, 4.4 : The symbolic mode, 4.4.4 : The Kabalistic drift
Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language (1984)
Context: Scholem … says that Jewish mystics have always tried to project their own thought into the biblical texts; as a matter of fact, every unexpressible reading of a symbolic machinery depends on such a projective attitude. In the reading of the Holy Text according to the symbolic mode, "letters and names are not conventional means of communication. They are far more. Each one of them represents a concentration of energy and expresses a wealth of meaning which cannot be translated, or not fully at least, into human language" [On the Kabbalah and Its Symbolism (1960); Eng. tr., p. 36]. For the Kabalist, the fact that God expresses Himself, even though His utterances are beyond any human insight, is more important than any specific and coded meaning His words can convey.
The Zohar says that "in any word shine a thousand lights" (3.202a). The unlimitedness of the sense of a text is due to the free combinations of its signifiers, which in that text are linked together as they are only accidentally but which could be combined differently.
"To the Indianapolis Clergy." The Iconoclast (Indianapolis, IN) (1883)
“He only half dies who leaves an image of himself in his sons.”
Muore per metà chi lascia un' immagine di se stesso nei figli.
II. 2.
Pamela (c. 1750)
Annie Besant Quotes
Closer
Fiction, Axiomatic (1995)
The Second Coming of Christ: The Resurrection of the Christ Within You, (2004) by Yogananda