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A Semiotic Tale of Two Pyramids: One Vertical the Other Inverted

A investigation of Reality is it material or spiritual.

Hinduism contains a vast body of scriptures. Divided as revealed and remembered and developed over millennia, these scriptures expound on theology, philosophy and mythology, providing spiritual insights and guidance on the practice of dharma (religious living). In the orthodox view, among such texts, the Vedas and the Upanishads are the foremost in authority, importance and antiquity. Other major scriptures include the Tantras, the sectarian Agamas, the Puras and the epics Mahabharata and Ramayana. The Bhagavad Gita, a treatise excerpted from the Mahabharata, is sometimes called a summary of the spiritual teachings of the Vedas. [10]

4.

Democritus (460-360 B.C.)

Current Atomic Model

1… A philosopher/scientist who theorized that all matter was made of indivisible particles (atoms).

2… His theory was based on logical reasoning, not empirical data. Philosophers/scientists of this time period did not think doing experiments was necessary. They thought you could reach the truth by pure logical reasoning, its interesting to note how right he may have been. contrast with Positivists.

5.

Positivism

(From the Dictionary of Philosophy, Progress Publishers)

A trend in bourgeois philosophy which declares natural (empirical) sciences to be the sole source of true knowledge and rejects the cognitive value of philosophical study. Positivism emerged in response to the inability of speculative philosophy (e.g. Classical German Idealism) to solve philosophical problems which had arisen as a result of scientific development. Positivists went to an opposite extreme and rejected theoretical speculation as a means of obtaining knowledge. Positivism declared false and senseless all problems, concepts and propositions of traditional philosophy on being, substances, and causes. etc. that could not be solved or verified by experience due to a high degree of abstract nature. Positivism claims to be a fundamentally new, non-metaphysical (”positive”) philosophy, modelled on empirical sciences and providing them with a methodology. Positivism is essentially empiricism brought to extreme logical consequences in certain respects: inasmuch as any knowledge is empirical knowledge in one form or another, no speculation can be knowledge. Positivism has not escaped the lot of traditional philosophy, since its own propositions (rejection of speculation, phenomenalism, etc.) turned out to be unverifiable by experience and, consequently, metaphysical.

Positivism was founded by Auguste Comte, who introduced the term “positivism”, historically; there are three stages in the development of positivism. The exponents of the first were Comte, E. Littré and P. Laffitte in France, J S Mill and Herbert Spencer in England. Alongside the problems of the theory of knowledge (Comte) and logic (Mill), the main place in the first Positivism was assigned to sociology (Comte’s idea of transforming society on the basis of science, Spencer’s organic theory of society).

The rise of the second stage in Positivism – empirio-criticism – dates back to the 1870s – 1890s and is associated with Ernst Mach and Avenarius, who renounced even formal recognition of objective real objects, which was a feature of early Positivism. In Machism, the problems of cognition were interpreted from the viewpoint of extreme psychologism, which was merging with subjectivism..

6. www.divinecosmos.com/

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  1. Peter Bradshaw

    On July 18, 2009 at 12:07 am


    Would this be Kerry Bindon, formerly of Avalon NSW, mate of Paul Licciardo? If so, kindly contact Peter Bradshaw on 02-9482 8333 or 0418 287460 during business hours.

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