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16 results for "osiris"
D_5_29 — The Djed Pillar: Stability, Resurrection, and the Backbone of Osiris
The Djed pillar is one of ancient Egypt's most pervasive and enigmatic symbols — an object resembling a column with four horizontal bars near its top, associated with stability (djed = "enduring/stable"), the god Osiris,
B_1_03 — Osiris — Death, Resurrection, and the Underworld Kingdom
Osiris (Egyptian: Wsjr, conventionally vocalized as Wesir/Usir) is one of the most important deities of ancient Egypt — the god who rules the underworld (Duat), judges the dead, and provides the template for resurrection
A_4_39 — Egyptian Book of the Dead: Funerary Texts, Afterlife Geography, and Judgment of the Soul
The "Book of the Dead" (Pert em Heru, "Coming/Going Forth by Day") is a corpus of ancient Egyptian funerary texts — spells, hymns, incantations, and illustrated vignettes — designed to guide the deceased through the Duat
A_3_03 — Egyptian Book of the Dead and Funerary Literature
The Egyptian Book of the Dead (Pert em Hru — "Coming Forth by Day") is a collection of ~200 magical spells, hymns, and instructions designed to guide the deceased through the Duat (underworld) and into eternal life in th
A_3_02 — The Egyptian Pyramid Texts: Oldest Religious Literature on Earth
The Pyramid Texts are the oldest substantial body of Egyptian funerary literature ever discovered and among the oldest substantial religious corpora of any civilization — inscribed on the interior walls of Old Kingdom py
A_3_10 — Egyptian Coffin Texts: Middle Kingdom Afterlife Spells
The Egyptian Coffin Texts are a corpus of approximately 1,185 funerary spells inscribed primarily on the interior surfaces of rectangular wooden coffins during Egypt's Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE, Dynasties 11–13).
C_1_20 — The Shadow Archetype in World Mythology
The Shadow archetype, articulated by Carl Gustav Jung as a fundamental component of the psyche, manifests across world mythologies as the dark double, the rejected brother, or the monstrous other that heroes must confron
C_1_05 — Dying-and-Rising Deity Pattern
This document examines Dying-and-Rising Deity Pattern, a topic within the Global Traditions research area. Key areas of investigation include Frazer's Original Formulation, The Critical Counter-Argument: Jonathan Z. Smit
C_5_31 — Resurrection and the Dying-Rising God: Death and Rebirth Across Traditions
The dying-and-rising god — a deity who dies (often violently), descends to the underworld, and returns to life — is one of the most debated categories in comparative religion. James George Frazer (The Golden Bough, 1890/
E_4_04 — Mathematical Encoding in Mythology
Certain numbers appear with suspicious regularity across ancient mythologies worldwide: 72 (Egyptian conspirators against Osiris, degrees of precessional shift per degree), 108 (Hindu/Buddhist sacred number, suitors of P
INTERDOC_28 — The Death-Rebirth Universal Pattern
The death-rebirth motif appears in every known mythological system: Osiris (Egyptian — murdered by Set, dismembered, reassembled by Isis, resurrected as lord of the afterlife, ~2400 BCE in Pyramid Texts), Inanna/Ishtar (
B_5_11 — Plant Spirits and Green Man: Vegetation Entities Worldwide
Plant spirits and vegetation entities — supernatural beings inhabiting, embodying, or governing plant life — represent one of the oldest layers of religious thought, reflecting humanity's absolute dependence on the veget
B_1_17 — Underworld Deities: Ereshkigal, Hades, Hel, and the Rulers of the Dead
Every major world civilization has produced deities or supernatural rulers associated with death and the underworld. The Sumerian Ereshkigal (attested from the 3rd millennium BCE), the Greek Hades (first named in the Ili
Y_5_03 — Pineal Gland / Third Eye Across Cultures
The pineal gland sits at the geometric center of the brain and has been called "the third eye" across cultures for millennia. Ancient pine cone motifs appear at the Vatican (Cortile della Pigna), Assyrian reliefs (winged
P_4_01 — Death and the Afterlife Across Cultures
Every known human culture has developed beliefs about what happens after death — making afterlife cosmology one of the most universal features of human thought. The major frameworks include: judgment and reward/punishmen
N_5_01 — The Shamanic-to-Institutional Pipeline
Across every major civilization, a remarkably consistent pattern emerges: direct, experiential knowledge-traditions — shamanic practices rooted in altered states of consciousness — undergo a five-stage transformation int
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