Wikipedia

Search results

Sunday, January 31, 2021

𐤎𐤐𐤓 صَفَر ספר

空 🈳 Void - लोक • (loká) m (Vedic: लाऊका lauká) & sfr
5/6/29/30/51/52 Suite

Ø5, sheaths & V (hierophant, from Ancient Greek ἱεροφάντης (hierophántēs), from ἱερός (hierós, “holy”) + φαίνω (phaínō, “I show, make known”).

Ø6, free will (libre arbitre) & VI (crisis, from Latin crisis, from Ancient Greek κρίσις (krísis, “a separating, power of distinguishing, decision, choice, election, judgment, dispute”), from κρίνω (krínō, “pick out, choose, decide, judge”).

29 (kǎn) "gorge" & अहूँ (ahūm̐ (阿吽)) τὸ ἄλφα καὶ τὸ ὦ:
  • the original Sanskrit term is composed of two letters, the first and the last (अनुस्वार, Anusvara) of the संस्कृत Sanskrit alphabet.
  • Koiné Greek: "ἐγώ εἰμι τὸ Ἄλφα καὶ τὸ Ὦ", "I am the Alpha and the Omega" (Book of Revelation verses 1:8).
  • The term is also used in 神道/しんとう Shintō and Buddhist architecture to describe the paired statues common in Japanese religious settings, most notably the 仁王 Niō & 狛犬 the komainu guarding the entrance or the 本殿 the main hall "honden", or inner shrine of many 神社 Shinto shrines. In most cases, one of the two, the right one, has its mouth open to pronounce the sound "a", while the other has it closed to utter the sound "um". The symbolism is the same already seen. The generic name for statues with an open mouth is agyō (阿形, lit. "a" shape), that for those with a closed mouth ungyō (吽形, lit. "un" shape").
  • The term a-un is used figuratively in some Japanese expressions as "a-un breathing" (阿吽の呼吸, a-un no kokyū) or "a-un relationship" (阿吽の仲, a-un no naka), indicating an inherently harmonious relationship or non-verbal communication.
In India, the original Sanscrit अहूँ "a-huṁ" or simply "Oṃ, ॐ, ओ३म्" is used as a mantra for meditation.

30, αἰών • (aiṓn) æons & ions
        ⮩ from earlier αἰϝών (aiwṓn), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eyu- (“vital force, life, long life, eternity”), whence also ἀεί (aeí, “always”).

51, thunder & storm, tempest & wake-up call.

52, mountain (山/艮 gèn, "Bound") & दुर्गा Durgā:
  • (literary) ‘the inaccessible or terrific goddess’
  • (literally) "difficult to approach",
  • daughter of हिमवत् (Himavat, the Himalayas, 喜馬拉雅山) &
  • wife of शिव śivá, “the auspicious one.
69, ♋︎ dual & quantum dynamism restored




No comments: