Amazon.com: Instant Enlightenment: Fast, Deep and Sexy: David Deida: Books
"Enlightenment is always instant and sudden. And usually forgotten, just as suddenly." ~David Deida Instant Enlightenment is an entertaining and compelling series of challenges to awaken our awareness and to encourage an understanding of who we are and how we can "live as love." Through David Deida's teachings we learn to transmute the mediocre and the mundane into love's free flowing powerful healing expression. What does it mean to "Open to God" or to "Love God?" How does a feeling of love relate to enlightenment? Why are most people tense, suffering, closing and in pain? The exercises or spiritual practice sessions serve two functions. The first is to make you aware of an area where you may still feel closed and unfulfilled. The second is to enlighten you with your own spiritual advancement. If you have any resistance to the topics, it can be one of two things. Either, you don't want to revert to your former days of darkness or you are afraid of moving toward the all-consuming light of love. For to revert to a state of unenlightened darkness is as frightening as going forward into love's overwhelmingly beautiful embrace.
Category: Instant Enlightenment
Spiritual Enlightenment - Spiritual Enlightenment in your hand
When you add it all up, you'll end up getting over 650 audio recordings that take up 11.4 gigabytes of disk space . That's over 250 hours of audio messages and teachings valued at over $7,640 when added all together! Not to mention a brand-new 80Gig iPod purchased directly from Apple for $250! If you seek spiritual enlightenment and want to embody the immense breadth and depth the Holy Spirit has to offer, this fully loaded iPod has everything needed to take you there.
Category: Spiritual Enlightenment
John Locke - Encyclopedia.com
John Locke , 1632-1704, English philosopher, founder of British empiricism. Locke summed up the Enlightenment in his belief in the middle class and its right to freedom of conscience and right to property, in his faith in science, and in his confidence in the goodness of humanity. His influence upon philosophy and political theory has been incalculable. Life and Work Educated at Christ Church College, Oxford, he became (1660) a lecturer there in Greek, rhetoric, and philosophy. He studied medicine, and his acquaintance with scientific practice had a strong influence upon his philosophical thought and method. In 1666, Locke met Anthony Ashley Cooper, the future 1st earl of Shaftesbury, and soon became his friend, physician, and adviser. After 1667, Locke had minor diplomatic and civil posts, most of them through Shaftesbury. In 1675, after Shaftesbury had lost his offices, Locke left England for France, where he met French leaders in science and philosophy. Returning to England in 1679, he soon retired to Oxford, where he stayed quietly until, suspected of radicalism by the government, he went to Holland and remained there several years (1683-89). In Holland he completed the famous Essay Concerning Human Understanding (1690), which was published in complete form after his return to England at the accession of William and Mary to the English throne.
Category: John Locke Enlightenment
Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: The Portable Enlightenment Reader (The Viking Portable Library) (The Viking Portable Library)
Dr. Kramnick does a disappointing job editing the selections in this volu I constantly found that they missed key points to the individual papers, which lend a great deal to their meaning. It is always difficult when compiling an abridged reader of this nature. What stays in? What goes out? I recommend skipping this reader, if possible, especially if you are interested in the Enlightenment. Stick with the source documents for the "whole story".
Category: Portable Enlightenment Reader
SparkNotes: The Enlightenment (1650–1800): The German Enlightenment
The German Enlightenment Events 1 7 7 4 - Goethe publishes The Sorrows of Young Werther 1 7 8 1 - Kant publishes Critique of Pure Reason 1 7 8 5 - Kant publishes Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals 1 8 0 8 - Goethe publishes first part of Faust 1 8 3 2 - Goethe publishes second part of Faust Key People Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - Mathematician and philosopher; invented many components of calculus; conceived of “spiritual atoms†called monads Immanuel Kant - Skeptic philosopher who formulated idea of transcendental idealism; had enormous influence on later philosophy, especially in Germany Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - Immensely prolific writer whose The Sorrows of Young Werther epitomized German Sturm und Drang movement; best known for epic verse drama Faust Hurdles to the German Enlightenment The political, social, and cultural layout of Germany in the eighteenth century inhibited much of the Enlightenment advancements that took place in France. Germany was divided into a number of smaller states, most of which were ruled by despots who stifled intellectual development. The total number of German newspapers had barely increased at all in the 1 5 0 years leading up to the Enlightenment, and the literary language in the country was predominantly Latin, which made the dispersion of other Enlightened works difficult. Moreover, whereas France had a combination of antsy intellectuals and flighty nobility, as well as a boom in middle-class literacy, Germany did not. Germany lacked the distinct rift between the middle class and the aristocracy, and there was not nearly the popular discontent with religion or the Church that there was in France. As a result, many German intellectuals refuted the French idea of empiricism, refusing to believe that a simplistic set of laws, akin to the laws of physics or astronomy, could dictate the operation of human society. Germany’s literary landscape was also quite jumbled: it had no distinct literary style, and different regions pulled from different languages and influences. The Aufklärung Nonetheless, after King Frederick the Great of Prussia introduced some Enlightenment ideas from other parts of Europe, a small German Enlightenment (often known by its German name, the Aufklärung) began, although it went off in an entirely different direction from the English or French movements. The German Enlightenment never subjected religion to the same scrutiny as in other countries; in fact, the Aufklärung retained a somewhat mystical view of the world, with some of Germany’s leading writers adhering to the idea of combining reason with religion. Leibniz The first major figure in the German Enlightenment was the brilliant Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz ( 1 6 4 6 – 1 7 1 6 ), who began his career in law but quickly moved out into other fields.
Category: Enlightenment Kant