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#11
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Over thinking over analysing :P
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Tao There's A Flavour of Metal for EVERYONE Mark 4:40 "Then he said to the disciples, `Why do you fear? Do you not believe in God?' " |
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#12
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Plato was a philospher searching for truth as all do,just like Gnostics search for the Gnosis or truth.
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#13
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__________________
Tao There's A Flavour of Metal for EVERYONE Mark 4:40 "Then he said to the disciples, `Why do you fear? Do you not believe in God?' " |
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#14
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Im not sure if Plato is a Gnostic but what we know is that. Gnosticism has been founded through Plato's Philosophical works of Neo-plato-ism. This help develop Gnosticism into what it is today
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"What people don't know will hurt them.." Names given to the worldly are very deceptive, for they divert our thoughts from what is correct to what is incorrect. Thus one who hears the word "God" does not perceive what is correct, but perceives what is incorrect. - Gospel of Phillip |
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#15
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Well I can tell you for sure Plato was not a Gnostic. Plato did not talk a lot about religion and we know he was a dualist. The only thing he really had to say about religion was that any story, as told by Hesiod and Homer and the other poets, which gives a bad image of the nature of the gods, portraying them as petty, devious, or warring and plotting and fighting against each other.
The Gods, in Plato's eyes, should only be represented as good, and pious, because it is the nature of divinity to be good (which is what we call universal truth). Plato tells us how he thinks the universe was created, but he warns us that his story is just a tale, because we being mortals could never understand, which is true till this day, we have theories but we don't know for sure. He says that the creator, created the universe from his likeness, out of the preexisting chaos, this is different from the Christian view that God created the universe out of void. |
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#16
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Right well the Gnostic takes it a step further. Gnostic's don't necessarily have to believe the myth was real, if it makes it easier for you than go ahead but its optional to me I'm sure some maybe true others not so much... Obviously I believe in God and I believe in a Demiurge there both within me and separate from me. The whole tale of how this world is not as it seems that the powers that be are deceiving you is a powerful wake-up shock to ones own ignorance.
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"What people don't know will hurt them.." Names given to the worldly are very deceptive, for they divert our thoughts from what is correct to what is incorrect. Thus one who hears the word "God" does not perceive what is correct, but perceives what is incorrect. - Gospel of Phillip |
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#17
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![]() I think Plato was probably one of the first Gnostics. But then, I believe that you can find Gnostics of every branch. ![]()
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"Peace be with you from peace, love from love, grace from grace, faith from faith, life from holy life." ~James |
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#18
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You've fallen into the fallacy that all Gnostics are Christian Gnostics... This simply isn't true. Gnostics are always "Christian" in the sense that they're "annointed" but they not all Christians are Gnostic. In fact, no Christians are Gnostic, they can't be. Literalism is the root of that little dualistic thing you're talking about ![]()
__________________
"Peace be with you from peace, love from love, grace from grace, faith from faith, life from holy life." ~James |
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#19
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Literalism and fundamentalism is what the faith of Gnosticism is definitely against. The world can only accept the truth in forms and images any other way is impossible, what a fundamentalist and literalist will do is is look at the form and image and say thats truth when its only a representation of the truth. An example is: Imagine a painting of a valley, a literalist would say "that valley is real" but someone who understands that the painting is only representing the valley.
__________________
"What people don't know will hurt them.." Names given to the worldly are very deceptive, for they divert our thoughts from what is correct to what is incorrect. Thus one who hears the word "God" does not perceive what is correct, but perceives what is incorrect. - Gospel of Phillip |
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#20
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Plato was not religious (perhaps in the sense that many people don't care about religion or go to a place of worship but they may declare them selfs this or that) you and all the other Gnostic's are reading into it. Some of his writings touch on what you might consider to be Gnostic in nature but it was not a "faith" for him. I'm not giving you my opinion I'm telling you what encyclopedia of philosophy has to say about the subject. And furthermore if you know the answer why bother to ask the question? |
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