mysticism

listen to the pronunciation of mysticism
Englisch - Türkisch
gizemcilik
tasavvuf
{i} mistisizm

Matematik, fizik ve astronomiye ilaveten Newton'un aynı zamanda simya, mistisizm ve teolojiye bir ilgisi vardı. - In addition to mathematics, physics and astronomy, Newton also had an interest in alchemy, mysticism and theology.

Englisch - Englisch
A doctrine of direct communication or spiritual intuition of divine truth
A transcendental union of soul or mind with the divine reality or divinity
The beliefs, ideas, or thoughts of mystics
Obscure thoughts and speculations
{n} obscurity of doctins
A word originally derived from the Greek and having a wide range of meaning in modern religion and philosophy A mystic may be said to be someone who has intuitions or intimations of the existence of inner and superior worlds, and who attempts to achieveconscious communion with them and the beings inhabiting these inner and invisible worlds
generally refers to a personal and non-rational path to God, whereby the soul seeks to join itself to God and become one with Him Mysticism is much like Zen in terms of being incommunicable and yet written about at great length
Obscurity of doctrine
complex system of mental exercises to strenghthen various mental abilities by eventually distinguishing the I thought from the me thought
A creed that the only path to knowledge is through a direct spiritual connection with God Deep meditation and peace is necessary for this to occur
the philosophy of religion contending that reality can be known only when we surrender our individuality and experience a union with the divine ground of all existence
is the creation of problems where none exist Mysticism is both an individual and a collective disease that puts people in coffins and societies on crutches Mysticism leaves empty heads and instills sour faces on people Mysticism is an act of war on rational thinking, honest effort, prosperous happiness, and life itself
1 belief in or experience of a reality surpassing normal human understanding or experience, especially a reality perceived as essential to the nature of life 2 a system of contemplative prayer and spirituality aimed at achieving direct intuitive experience of the divine
a religion based on mystical communion with an ultimate reality
{i} mystical spiritualism
The doctrine that the ultimate elements or principles of knowledge or belief are gained by an act or process akin to feeling or faith
Sometimes called the interior life, mysticism is a way that reaches for immediate (meaning no mediator or other mediating influence) awareness of God, and beyond that, for identity in God (in the words of Catherine of Siena, "My me is God") Mysticism implies an intense spiritual commitment but recognizes that progress along the path is attained by Grace alone A mystic's relationship with God is intimate, constant, and boundary-less, until finally only God remains Mysticism is at home in all traditions It is not a religion, a theology, or a philosophy in itself, but a way to traverse any of those The classic text on the subject is Evelyn Underhill's "Mysticism" which is out of print, but often available at outlets like Half com and Alibris See also seeker
Genus: Metaphysical system Differentia: Claims that there are realities other than that which we perceive Comment: All mysticism is arbitrary Link: Article
That element of religion involving the explicit experience of the immediate presence of God Also refers to ‘ordinary mysticism’ as the experience of God’s presence through everyday people, things and events (cf Rahner and Celtic spirituality) See also Contemplation and Centering prayer
The search through various prayers and practices to achieve unity with God in life (theosis) (see hesychasm)
The doctrine of the Mystics, who professed a pure, sublime, and wholly disinterested devotion, and maintained that they had direct intercourse with the divine Spirit, and aquired a knowledge of God and of spiritual things unattainable by the natural intellect, and such as can not be analyzed or explained
A field of magical study that deals with foretelling future, scrying distant places and garnering knowledge about the Universe that is otherwise unknowable
obscure or irrational thought a religion based on mystical communion with an ultimate reality
The pursuit of individual union with God While the Church supported many mystics that were in Holy Orders, the quest for this union by the laity refuted the need for Church intermediaries and led to charges of heresy against secular proponents
obscure or irrational thought
The pursuit of a transcendent, universal experience with the Absolute Reality
the articulation of experience beyond any symbolization
The belief that one can achieve direct consciousness of God or truth through meditation and intuition In mystic practices, one attempts to merge with God or the source of creation
Mysticism is a religious practice in which people search for truth, knowledge, and closeness to God through meditation and prayer. a religious practice in which people try to get knowledge of truth and to become united with God through prayer and meditation. Spiritual quest for union with the divine. Forms of mysticism are found in all major religions. Hinduism, with its goal of absorption of the soul in the All, is inherently predisposed to mystical experience. Buddhism emphasizes meditation as a means of moving toward nirvana. In Islam, Sufism employs metaphors of intoxication and of the love between bride and bridegroom to express the desire for union with the divine. In Judaism, the foundations of mysticism were laid in the visions of the biblical prophets and were later developed in the Kabbala and in Hasidism. Mysticism has appeared intermittently in Christianity, notably in the writings of St. Augustine and St. Teresa of Àvila, and in the works of Meister Eckhart and his 14th-century successors
sufism
mysticism

    Silbentrennung

    mys·ti·cism

    Türkische aussprache

    mîstîsîzım

    Aussprache

    /ˈməstəˌsəzəm/ /ˈmɪstɪˌsɪzəm/

    Etymologie

    () English from the early to mid 1700's, Confer French mysticisme.

    Videos

    ... mysticism that swept over this region ...
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