Changes

From Nordan Symposia
Jump to navigationJump to search
13 bytes removed ,  23:50, 15 December 2007
no edit summary
Line 18: Line 18:  
Locke's influence upon the concept can be found in [[Samuel Johnson]]'s celebrated Dictionary, in which Johnson abstains from offering a definition of "consciousness," choosing instead to simply quote Locke.
 
Locke's influence upon the concept can be found in [[Samuel Johnson]]'s celebrated Dictionary, in which Johnson abstains from offering a definition of "consciousness," choosing instead to simply quote Locke.
   −
stub: [[Higher consciousness]], also called [[super consciousness]] ([[Yoga]]), Buddhic consciousness ([[Theosophy]]), [[cosmic consciousness]] and [[God-consciousness]] ([[Sufism]] and [[Hinduism]])--to name but a few--are expressions used in various spiritual traditions to denote the consciousness of a human being who has reached a higher level of evolutionary development and who has come to know reality as it is. [[Evolution]] in this sense is not that which occurs by natural selection over generations of human reproduction but evolution brought about by the application of spiritual knowledge to the conduct of human life. Through the application of such knowledge (traditionally the preserve of the world's great religions) to practical self-management, the awakening and development of faculties dormant in the ordinary human being is achieved. These faculties are aroused by and developed in conjunction with certain dispositions of character such as patience, kindness, truthfulness, humility and [[forgiveness]] towards one's fellow man – qualities without which higher consciousness is not possible.
+
stub: Higher consciousness, also called superconsciousness ([[Yoga]]), Buddhic consciousness ([[Theosophy]]), cosmic consciousness and [[God-consciousness]] ([[Sufism]] and [[Hinduism]])--to name but a few--are expressions used in various spiritual traditions to denote the consciousness of a human being who has reached a higher level of evolutionary development and who has come to know reality as it is. [[Evolution]] in this sense is not that which occurs by natural selection over generations of human reproduction but evolution brought about by the application of spiritual knowledge to the conduct of human life. Through the application of such knowledge (traditionally the preserve of the world's great religions) to practical self-management, the awakening and development of faculties dormant in the ordinary human being is achieved. These faculties are aroused by and developed in conjunction with certain dispositions of character such as patience, kindness, truthfulness, humility and [[forgiveness]] towards one's fellow man – qualities without which higher consciousness is not possible.
    
==Concept==
 
==Concept==

Navigation menu