The Cosmos in Ancient Greek Religious Experience

The Cosmos in Ancient Greek Religious Experience
Author: Efrosyni Boutsikas
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2020-10-29
Genre: History
ISBN: 110848817X

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Reconstructs ancient rituals in their day/night/season combining them with relevant mythology and astronomical observations to understand the ritual's cosmological links.

Cosmos in the Ancient World

Cosmos in the Ancient World
Author: Phillip Sidney Horky
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 371
Release: 2019-07-04
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1108423647

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Traces the concept of kosmos as order, arrangement, and ornament in ancient philosophy, literature, and aesthetics.

Cosmos, the Soul, and God

Cosmos, the Soul, and God
Author: Charles London Arnold
Publisher:
Total Pages: 316
Release: 1907
Genre: God
ISBN:

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The Cosmotheandric Experience

The Cosmotheandric Experience
Author: Raimundo Panikkar
Publisher: Motilal Banarsidass Publishe
Total Pages: 188
Release: 1998
Genre: Cosmology
ISBN: 9788120813403

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The Cosmotheandric Experience is not a Christian, or an Indic, or a Buddhist study, but an interdisciplinary study with a firm foundation. It aims at an integration of the whole of reality: We have to reconstruct the body of Prajapati, even if some of the parts feel unworthy, are shy or run away ... We have to think of all of the fragments of the present world in order to bring them together into a harmonious--though not monoliithic--whole. The Cosmotheandric principle, which the author advocates, could be formulated by saying that the divine, the human and the earthly are three irreducible dimensions which constitute the real.

Religious Cosmology

Religious Cosmology
Author: Paul F. Kisak
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2016-05-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9781533205742

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A religious cosmology (also mythological cosmology) is a way of explaining the origin, the history and the evolution of the cosmos or universe based on the religious mythology of a specific tradition. Religious cosmologies usually include an act or process of creation by a creator deity or a larger pantheon. The universe of the ancient Israelites was made up of a flat disc-shaped earth floating on water, heaven above, underworld below. Humans inhabited earth during life and the underworld after death, and the underworld was morally neutral; only in Hellenistic times (after c.330 BC) did Jews begin to adopt the Greek idea that it would be a place of punishment for misdeeds, and that the righteous would enjoy an afterlife in heaven. In this period too the older three-level cosmology was widely replaced by the Greek concept of a spherical earth suspended in space at the center of a number of concentric heavens. Around the time of Jesus or a little earlier, the Greek idea that God had actually created matter replaced the older idea that matter had always existed, but in a chaotic state. This concept, called creatio ex nihilo, is now the accepted orthodoxy of most denominations of Judaism and Christianity. Most denominations of Christianity and Judaism claim that a single, uncreated God was responsible for the creation of the cosmos. This book gives an overview of the religious cosmologies, creationism or creation myths that are associated with Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Jainism, Islam, Zoroastrianism and numerous others.

Cosmos and History

Cosmos and History
Author: Mircea Eliade
Publisher:
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1959
Genre: Cosmology
ISBN:

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This founding work of the history of religions, first published in English in 1954, secured the North American reputation of the Romanian émigré-scholar Mircea Eliade (1907-1986). Making reference to an astonishing number of cultures and drawing on scholarship published in no less than half a dozen European languages, Eliade's The Myth of the Eternal Return makes both intelligible and compelling the religious expressions and activities of a wide variety of archaic and "primitive" religious cultures. While acknowledging that a return to the "archaic" is no longer possible, Eliade passionately insists on the value of understanding this view in order to enrich our contemporary imagination of what it is to be human. Jonathan Z. Smith's new introduction provides the contextual background to the book and presents a critical outline of Eliade's argument in a way that encourages readers to engage in an informed conversation with this classic text.

Hesiod's Cosmos

Hesiod's Cosmos
Author: Jenny Strauss Clay
Publisher:
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2003
Genre: Cosmology, Ancient, in literature
ISBN: 9780511070600

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In the Theogony and the Works and Days Hesiod provides the earliest systematic and comprehensive account of the genesis of the Greek gods and the nature of human life. Hesiod's Cosmos argues for reading the two poems as complementary halves of a whole embracing the divine and human cosmos.

The Hidden Heart of the Cosmos

The Hidden Heart of the Cosmos
Author: Brian Swimme
Publisher:
Total Pages: 115
Release: 1996
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 9781570750588

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Following the most recent scientific discoveries about the birth of the universe, this text shows how these new insights replace outmoded ways of seeing the world, bridging the chasm between science and spirituality, the physical realm and the soul. This book will help readers to grasp the larger significance of the human enterprise in this evolving universe.