Words
Adulterate: 1. To corrupt any given thing with the addition of extraneous input. 2. To corrupt any given thing by subtracting an essential element. 3. To forcefully introduce or remove any mass/energy into or from an already self-contained unit of mass/energy. 4. To disrupt equilibrium.
Adultery: a religious bastardization of adulterate 1; that ‘good’ blood can be corrupted by the addition of ‘bad’ blood. See Adulterate 1. 2. The concept that one human being’s energy can adulterate the energy of another human being; see Adulterate 4. This is a true concept; though the concept has been falsified (adulterated) by organized religions attachment of the concept to sex and marriage. Sexual intercourse is not required for the energy of one human being to disrupt the energy of another human being: we feel ‘energized’ around some people and ‘drained’ around others. Why this happens is based on spiritual law and is in fact necessary to consciously achieve Holy Matrimony; as an alignment of energies between human beings can’t usually be achieved without first being disrupted. See Holy Matrimony 1.
Anger: 1. An emotion. 2. The emotional response to contradictions which arise between a. personal belief and physical reality, and b. faith and circumstance.
Arrogance: believing that one human being is better than another human being.
Atheism: the belief that there is no God, gods, or any ‘paranormal’ entity.
Axiom: a belief
Beautiful: to possess a high degree of beauty.
Beauty: truth of essence.
Belief: a personal opinion accepted as truth.
Buddha: 1. The Buddha; See Prince Sadarrtha. 2. A Buddha; a human being who has achieved spiritual enlightenment.
Buddhism: 1. A religion. 2. Pantheism.
Chastity: 1. Modern; the practice of abstinence before marriage. 2. Archaic; the practice of abstinence outside of wedlock. 3. The false virtue; chastity.
Christianity: 1. A religion. 2. Generally accepted as monotheism, though containing a polytheistic hierarchy of beings; i.e. the devil, angels, archangels, etc.
Cognition: to become aware of a perception
Compassion: the conscious use of the soul for feeling
Concentration: the conscious use of thee spirit for thinking
Courage: 1. The strength to manipulate one’s surroundings according to personal will. 2. Strength of I; decisiveness.
Crime: the effect of an action that is contradictory to any law; natural, spiritual, federal, state, etc.
Desire: the energy exerted by the soul to perceive feeling.
Despair: cowardice.
Divine: 1. A level of energy. 2. The; or relating to the, ultimate universal being.
Doubt: 1. The force which compels us to act contradictory to personal will; a weakness of the I. 2. The inability to accept or reject a thought or a feeling as truth.
Electricity: 1. a physical phenomena created by the response of protons and electrons reacting to like and dislike charges wherein opposite charges attract and like charges repel. 2. The motion created by this physical phenomena; electrical current.
Emotion: 1. An ability of the soul. 2. Soul force.
Empathy: a human beings understanding of another human beings feeling or thought in which the human being does not share/agree with the other human beings feeling or thought.
Energy: motion.
Entropy: the scientific word for evil.
Envy: sadness due to the success of another.
Essence: 1. The fundamental element of a things being. 2. Truth of being, i.e. by its very nature.
Ethical: individual adherence to the standards of the individual’s society.
Ethics: the societal standards with which any action is considered as being singularly right or wrong.
Evagrius Ponticus: aka Evagrius the Solitary; a Christian monk who lived 345-399 AD.
Evil: the theistic word for entropy.
Faculty: ability; i.e. feeling is a faculty of the soul.
Faith: action based on belief.
Fantasy: 1. An alternate reality. 2. A daydream.
Fear: the force which compels us to act contradictory to our thoughts; a weakness of spirit.
Fearlessness: strength of spirit.
Feeling: 1. A soul perception. 2. The act of becoming aware of a soul perception.
Force: applied energy.
Gluttony: acceptance of need without thought.
God: 1. God: The supreme being of the universe; i.e. the Christian Almighty. 2. Gods: any beings whose existence and/or abilities are independent of the natural laws of the physical world. See Common Element Note 2.
Grace: 1. The conscious use of emotion. 2. The act of using emotion as a means to an end; i.e. love for forgiveness, hate for resolve, etc. 3. Soul power.
Greed: the ceaseless conquest of power.
Grief: worry.
Heresy: any concept that contradicts an organized religions established doctrine.
Heretic: any person who speaks, writes, or believes a heresy.
Hinduism: 1. A religion. 2. Pantheism.
Holy Matrimony: 1. The alignment of the soul, spiritual, and divine energies of one human being to another human being. Generally portrayed as an intentional and conscious act though most often a natural, unconscious, and misunderstood compatibility; i.e. love at first sight. 2. The ultimate goal of marriage; oneness.
Honesty: acceptance of truth regardless of individual want or need.
I: 1. One of the three energies in the soul-spiritual makeup of the human being. 2. The personal definition of an individual concerning who or what they are; a human beings individual identity. 3. Divine energy.
Idea: the cognition of a perception.
Immaculate Conception: pregnancy caused by divine energy.
Intuitive Leap: faith.
Islam: 1. A religion. 2. Monotheism.
Judaism: 1. A religion. 2. Monotheism.
Libation: a liquid offering; usually to God or the deceased. An example is Genesis 35:14.
Light: electromagnetic radiation; which in the 400 to 700 nanometer range is detected by the human eye as color. (A nanometer is a measurement of wavelength).
Logic: 1. A branch of philosophy concerning the discipline of thought for reason. 2. The specific direction of thought/logical reasoning: inductive and deductive logic tend to dominate in academia, though reductive and abductive also exist.
Lust: the ceaseless conquest to replace soul experience with physical gratification.
Luxury Consumption: gluttony.
Magnetism: 1. A physical phenomena created by the reaction of like and dislike force with like and dislike force; wherein opposite forces attract and like forces repel. 2. The current created by this phenomena; magnetic force.
Marriage: 1. The secular arrangement which results from a human being becoming legally bound to another human being by means of the socio-political laws that effect their physical place of residence. 2. The granted assignment of rights, responsibilities, or attributes of any given thing to another given thing that results in a separate totality; i.e. walking down the aisle at the marriage of sea and stone. 3. The merging of one concept with another concept to encompass both in a separate all inclusive concept; i.e. my house is your house it’s our house.
Meditation: the concentration on a single perception to experience its truth.
Mercy: the use of force to defend the defenseless with the absence of personal gain.
Monotheism: the belief that there exists one divine being.
Moral: the belief that an object, human being, or entity can exist as being singularly good or evil.
Morality: the extent to which a human being bases their actions based on their morals.
Muhammad: aka The Prophet. Born in Mecca (modern Saudi Arabia) and lived c. 570-632 AD.
Murder: to kill without need.
Mystic: 1. A human being who seeks truth through their feelings. 2. A human being who views and reacts to the world based on the needs of their soul.
Mysticism: The practice of experiencing the soul, spirit, or divine truths through feeling their existence.
Mythology: outdated religion.
Need: necessity; i.e. food is a necessity for the substance of our physical body.
Nirvana: Divine bliss.
Original Sin: the theory that every human being is born with the inclination to sin.
Pantheism: the belief that all things exist as part of a divine entity.
Perception: a conscious observation.
Philosophy 1: 1. Trained thought. 2. The individual adherence to a specific form of trained thought; see Philosophy 2.
Philosophy 2: There are basically three types of philosophy: 1. The exercise of intellect (thought) to discover truth; known as Rationalism. 2. The observation of physical reality through sense perception to discover truth; known as Empiricism. 3. The basis that no truth can be justified as being truth because truth is a matter of perspective; known as Skepticism. See The Common Element Note 1.
Polytheism: the belief that there exists elemental (soul), spiritual, and divine beings.
Pope Gregory I: born in Rome as Gregorius Anicius. Lived 540-604 AD.
Prayer: meditation.
Pride: acting out of arrogance without thought.
Primal Mystic: any person belonging to the previous evolutions of man before the inheritance of the I.
Prince Sidarrtha; aka The Buddha; born as Sidarrtha Gautama. When he was born and when he died is a topic of debate. It seems safe to conclude that Prince Sidarrtha lived his lifetime between the years of 600-400 BCE. While alive Prince Sidarrtha was addressed as The Buddha; though after death is addressed by many other names and titles, most notably as Tathagata.
Purity: 1. A qualitative attribute assigned to any element or compound based on the absence of any foreign elements or compounds. 2. The false application of the previous definition to the soul-spiritual complex of the human being; as energy may overlap but it can’t be combined with another energy. In example: electricity may generate magnetism, and magnetism may generate electricity; yet electricity and magnetism remain two separate forms of energy.
Redemption: having risen above sin and crime.
Religion: a collective attempt by a society to explain the existence of the human being.
Repent: regret
Resurrection: the revival of the physical body from death.
Salvation: the forgiveness for past sin.
Shame: the force which compels us to act contradictory to our feelings; a soul weakness.
Shameless: strength of soul.
Sin: 1. Cause; causality. 2. An act contradictory to the nature of the soul, spirit, or divine. 3. Falsehood; to veer untrue.
Sin and Crime: soul-spiritual laws of existence; equal to cause and effect in physical reality.
Sloth: a person incapable of acting on personal will due to doubt.
Soul: 1. One of the three energies in the soul-spiritual make-up of the human being. 2. A level of energy.
Sound: vibrations; which in the 20-20,000 hertz range is detected by the human ear; audible sound. (Hertz is a measurement of wavelength).
Spirit: 1. One of the three energies in the soul-spiritual make-up of the human being. 2. A level of energy.
Temperance: moderation.
The Great Lie: death is necessary to reach heaven.
The Human Condition: the struggle of the individual human being to base their action on a thought or an emotion.
Theology: 1. The application of rational thought to prove or deny the existence of God. 2. The rationalization of concepts to understand or deny the existence of any elemental (soul), spiritual, or divine beings.
Thinking: 1. An ability of the spirit. 2. Spiritual force.
Thought: a spiritual perception.
True: 1. Real. 2. Correct.
Truth: that which is accepted as being true.
Vanity: 1. Any action of a human being who has based their actions on a falsehood. 2. The state in which a human being lives when pursuing a goal based on the premise of an illusion. 3. The exclusion of truth to claim success; false victory.
Vice: habit.
Want: whimsical fancy.
Wavelength: a measurement of motion; the reach of influence pertaining to the effects of various types of energy.
Wicca: 1. A religion. 2. Polytheism.
Willing: 1. An ability of the I. 2. Divine force.
Wrath: acting out of anger without thought.