Nghĩa của từ theosophy bằng Tiếng Anh

noun
1
any of a number of philosophies maintaining that a knowledge of God may be achieved through spiritual ecstasy, direct intuition, or special individual relations, especially the movement founded in 1875 as the Theosophical Society by Helena Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott (1832–1907).
In the early 1890s, she became a leading exponent of the religious movement of theosophy (emphasizing an individual spiritual awareness of God), and went to live in India.

Đặt câu với từ "theosophy"

Dưới đây là những mẫu câu có chứa từ "theosophy", trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh. Chúng ta có thể tham khảo những mẫu câu này để đặt câu trong tình huống cần đặt câu với từ theosophy, hoặc tham khảo ngữ cảnh sử dụng từ theosophy trong bộ từ điển Từ điển Tiếng Anh

1. Anthroposophy sprang from theosophy

2. That is theosophy, theosophy is that they are thinking that there is something superior.

3. At last, people became peace in Theosophy.

4. Theosophy is the result of the scientific development in the west society.

5. According to Drujinin, "the statements of Theosophy are an absurd nonsense."

6. (wikipedia Chorale) (en noun) (theosophy) A form of Lutheran or Protestant hymn tune

7. Theosophy became after the thirties a shadow of the former mind - swaying movement.

8. Causeless cause (or all cause) in Theosophy, is 'An Omnipresent, Eternal, Boundless, and Immutable Principle'

9. It was later enriched and influenced by those individuals who gave Theosophy further expression.

10. I saw less and less of the people who merely repeated the ideas of Theosophy.

11. It was a constant aim of Theosophy, though implicit, and it was accompanied always by a distrust to the scientific approach.

12. European interests in Indian religions were not by no means confined to the movements like Theosophy.

13. “Anthroposophy is continuous with the Rosicrucian stream of the Christian esoteric tradition.” Summarizing, then, we can say that Anthroposophy combines Theosophy, certain …

14. I was very sceptical and, being almost entirely ignorant of the truths of Theosophy, thought Theosophists mad in their beliefs.

15. Ibn Abi al-Hadid has quoted As for theosophy and dealing with matters of divinity, it was not an Arab art.

16. 21 This is evident not just in the relatively small early Gnostic groups, but also in more recent Gnostic traditions like the Christian theosophy of Jacob Bohme.

17. This is evident not just in the relatively small early Gnostic groups, but also in more recent Gnostic traditions like the Christian theosophy of Jacob Bohme.

18. An esoteric theosophy of rabbinical origin based on the Hebrew scriptures and developed between the 7th and 18th centuries Synonyms: Cabala, Cabbala, Kabala, Kabbala, Kabbalah, Qabbala, Qabbalah; Cabbalah noun

19. An esoteric theosophy of rabbinical origin based on the Hebrew scriptures and developed between the 7th and 18th centuries Synonyms: Cabala, Cabbala, Kabala, Kabbala, Kabbalah, Qabbala, Qabbalah; Cabbalah noun

20. He translated Latin, German and French alchemical works into English and worked with members of the Societas Rosicruciana in Anglia and the Theosophy of the 19th century, according to Hockley.

21. Relating to, proceeding from, consisting of, or resembling the stars an Astral body biology of or relating to the aster occurring in dividing cells theosophy denoting or relating to a supposed supersensible …

22. Anthroposophy A religious philosophy developed by Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925) of Germany, by revising Hindu theosophy through the substitution of the human for God as the center of the new system.

23. Examples of Anthroposophy in a Sentence Recent Examples on the Web In Europe the tenets of Buddhism, theosophy, and Anthroposophy were in vogue, and many other artists of the period — including Kandinsky and Malevich — explored a spiritual basis …

24. Like most of the writers on flying saucers and the so-called contactees that emerged during the 1950s, Jessup displayed familiarity with the alternative mythology of human prehistory developed by Helena P. Blavatsky's cult of Theosophy, which included the mythical lost continents of Atlantis, Mu, and Lemuria.

25. Brennan was fully aware, for example, of the interest of the early German Romantics in Boehmist theosophy, and Barnes traces the itinerarium of the Boehmist ideas of the mirror and the abyss through Romantic and Symbolist interpretations to their appropriation in Poems