
“What theology that would have been, a god self-worshipping, a drug addicted to itself.”
Source: Embassytown (2011), Chapter 18 (p. 239)
Nan Yar = Who am I?
“What theology that would have been, a god self-worshipping, a drug addicted to itself.”
Source: Embassytown (2011), Chapter 18 (p. 239)
Source: The Sickness Unto Death: A Christian Psychological Exposition for Upbuilding and Awakening
The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî (1870)
The Spiral Staircase: My Climb Out of Darkness (2004)
Context: We are, the great spiritual writers insist, most fully ourselves when we give ourselves away, and it is egotism that holds us back from that transcendent experience that has been called God, Nirvana, Brahman, or the Tao.
What I now realize, from my study of the different religious traditions, is that a disciplined attempt to go beyond the ego brings about a state of ecstasy. Indeed, it is in itself ekstasis. Theologians in all the great faiths have devised all kinds of myths to show that this type of kenosis, or self-emptying, is found in the life of God itself. They do not do this because it sounds edifying, but because this is the way that human nature seems to work. We are most creative and sense other possibilities that transcend our ordinary experience when we leave ourselves behind.
Books on Religion and Christianity, I am the Truth. Toward a philosophy of Christianity (1996)
Source: Michel Henry, I am the Truth. Toward a Philosophy of Christianity, translated by Susan Emanuel, Stanford University Press, 2003, p. 27-28
“Mind is infinite and self-ruled, and is mixed with nothing, but is alone itself by itself.”
Frag. B 12, quoted in John Burnet's Early Greek Philosophy, (1920), Chapter 6.
Source: The Way Towards The Blessed Life or the Doctrine of Religion 1806, p. 78
“No self can truly know itself and be ashamed.”
Self and World (1957)