Andrés
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
The resurrection seems to be quite an important bit in terms of if it's a literal, if you truly believe that, or if you feel it was visionary. The virgin birth being another one.
So this is, you get why it's a little bit confusing because I understand, it sounds like you just believe Jesus was a powerful individual, but he was also like sort of God, but also like didn't do all the God kind of things that people denote him with doing. Yeah. Does that make sense?
So this is, you get why it's a little bit confusing because I understand, it sounds like you just believe Jesus was a powerful individual, but he was also like sort of God, but also like didn't do all the God kind of things that people denote him with doing. Yeah. Does that make sense?
So this is, you get why it's a little bit confusing because I understand, it sounds like you just believe Jesus was a powerful individual, but he was also like sort of God, but also like didn't do all the God kind of things that people denote him with doing. Yeah. Does that make sense?
I think we do lose a lot, obviously, of the poetic existential impactfulness in our desire for literal translation of certain events historically. And it sounds like in your exploration of the mystical traditions, you know, whether it's through Sufi, Kabbalah, or, you know, deeper research into the Gnostic faith and the Essenes.
I think we do lose a lot, obviously, of the poetic existential impactfulness in our desire for literal translation of certain events historically. And it sounds like in your exploration of the mystical traditions, you know, whether it's through Sufi, Kabbalah, or, you know, deeper research into the Gnostic faith and the Essenes.
I think we do lose a lot, obviously, of the poetic existential impactfulness in our desire for literal translation of certain events historically. And it sounds like in your exploration of the mystical traditions, you know, whether it's through Sufi, Kabbalah, or, you know, deeper research into the Gnostic faith and the Essenes.
If we were just to pull one, I suppose, value or learning from the mystical side of faith from your studies that has most impacted your way of being, I'm curious if you want to share one.
If we were just to pull one, I suppose, value or learning from the mystical side of faith from your studies that has most impacted your way of being, I'm curious if you want to share one.
If we were just to pull one, I suppose, value or learning from the mystical side of faith from your studies that has most impacted your way of being, I'm curious if you want to share one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You only live once. From the Advaita perspective, there is that saying, the world is illusion, Brahman alone is real, the world is Brahman. With that perspective that the illusion of separation is still part of the totality of all that is.
You only live once. From the Advaita perspective, there is that saying, the world is illusion, Brahman alone is real, the world is Brahman. With that perspective that the illusion of separation is still part of the totality of all that is.
You only live once. From the Advaita perspective, there is that saying, the world is illusion, Brahman alone is real, the world is Brahman. With that perspective that the illusion of separation is still part of the totality of all that is.
i think it does bring us back to the origination of the exploration between panpsychism and value and ethic inherent within life um really so much of this can get over complicated quite quickly when the reality is a lot of us just sense for a deeper sense of connection within all life you know there is
i think it does bring us back to the origination of the exploration between panpsychism and value and ethic inherent within life um really so much of this can get over complicated quite quickly when the reality is a lot of us just sense for a deeper sense of connection within all life you know there is
i think it does bring us back to the origination of the exploration between panpsychism and value and ethic inherent within life um really so much of this can get over complicated quite quickly when the reality is a lot of us just sense for a deeper sense of connection within all life you know there is
this felt sense that perhaps because at the most fundamental level we are one with everything, that to the degree we are disconnected from that experience, we feel a sense of lack in our life. And these mystical traditions, these practices, these teachings point to our inherent interconnectedness with life. And from that perspective, we're never alone. And so it, I think, positions us nicely