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228 results for "Minoan religion" — page 5 of 12
A_2_07 — 2 Enoch (Slavonic) and 3 Enoch (Hebrew Apocalypse)
2 Enoch (the "Slavonic Apocalypse of Enoch" or "Book of the Secrets of Enoch") and 3 Enoch (the "Hebrew Apocalypse of Enoch" or "Sefer Hekhalot") are two distinct pseudepigraphical texts that extend the Enochic tradition
A_2_00 — Biblical Gnostic Western Esoteric: Subfolder Summary
A_2_05 — The Hermetic Tradition: Thoth, Hermes Trismegistus, and the Emerald Tablet
This document examines The Hermetic Tradition: Thoth, Hermes Trismegistus, and the Emerald Tablet, a topic within the Foundations research area. Notable findings include: Ancient Egyptian tradition describes a Book of Th
A_4_00 — Asian Indigenous Eastern: Subfolder Summary
A_4_15 — Guru Granth Sahib as Primary Sacred Text
The Guru Granth Sahib (ਗੁਰੂ ਗ੍ਰੰਥ ਸਾਹਿਬ) is the central sacred scripture and living spiritual authority ("eternal Guru") of Sikhism, compiled by the fifth Guru, Arjan Dev, in 1604 CE (the Adi Granth) and finalized by the
A_4_35 — Chinese Millenarian Sacred Texts
Chinese millenarian sacred texts constitute a vast, largely unstudied corpus of sectarian religious literature produced over more than a thousand years (Song dynasty through the 20th century) by heterodox religious movem
A_4_25 — Jain Agamas: Canonical Scriptures of Non-Violence and Asceticism
The Jain Agamas (Āgama, "tradition/scripture") are the canonical scriptures of Jainism, one of the world's oldest continuously practiced religions. The teachings are attributed to Mahāvīra (Vardhamāna, c. 599–527 BCE or
A_4_01 — The Mahabharata: India's Epic of Cosmic War
The Mahabharata is the longest epic poem ever composed — at ~100,000 verses (1.8 million words), it is roughly 10 times the combined length of the Iliad and the Odyssey. Attributed to the sage Vyasa ("the compiler"), it
A_4_09 — Avestan Texts — Gathas, Vendidad, and Yasna
The Avesta is the primary scripture of Zoroastrianism, the religion founded by the prophet Zarathushtra (Greek: Zoroaster) in ancient Iran. The surviving Avesta — a fraction of a much larger corpus reportedly destroyed d
A_3_08 — Celtic Mythology and Druidic Tradition
Celtic mythology encompasses the religious narratives, cosmological concepts, and heroic legends of the Celtic-speaking peoples who dominated much of western and central Europe from the Hallstatt period (c. 800 BCE) thro
A_3_00 — Egyptian African Mediterranean: Subfolder Summary
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).
U_1_02 — Sacred Music — Chant, Raga, and Acoustic Theology
Sacred music — sound deliberately structured for ritual, worship, or spiritual transformation — appears in every documented human culture. From the elaborately rule-governed Quranic recitation (tajwid) to the microtonal
U_0_00 — Art, Music & Culture: Section Summary
U_3_04 — Fermentation, Brewing & Sacred Beverages
Fermentation — the biochemical conversion of sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide by yeast and bacteria — is among humanity's oldest biotechnologies, with evidence of intentional fermented beverages dating to the Jiahu r
U_4_13 — Mandala: Sacred Circle Art, Meditation, and Cosmic Diagram
A mandala (Sanskrit: मण्डल, maṇḍala, "circle," "essence," "completion") is a geometric, symmetrical diagram — typically circular or square-within-circle — used in Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and other Asian religious traditio
U_4_00 — Sacred Symbolic Ritual: Subfolder Summary
U_4_12 — Iconography and Religious Art
Iconography — the study and production of religious and symbolic imagery — and religious art broadly represent perhaps the single largest category of artistic production in human history. Theoretical framework: Erwin Pan
U_4_08 — Garden Design & Sacred Landscapes
Gardens have served throughout human history as constructed intersections of nature, art, religion, and power — from the Persian pairidaeza (walled garden, the etymological root of "paradise") to Japanese Zen rock garden
INTERDOC_76 — Spatial Memory Architectures and Non-Local Consciousness Geometry
[KEY FINDING] The most efficient way for human consciousness to retain abstract, non-spatial information is to forcibly encode it into a 3D spatial construct (the Memory Palace). Modern fMRI demonstrates that mnemonic ch
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